Convectively driven decadal zonal accelerations in Earth's fluid core
Colin More, Mathieu Dumberry

TL;DR
This paper presents a model demonstrating that convective magnetic field fluctuations in Earth's core can cause decadal zonal accelerations via Lorentz torque, aligning with observational data.
Contribution
The study introduces a quasi-geostrophic magnetoconvection model showing how magnetic field fluctuations drive Earth's core zonal accelerations through Lorentz torque.
Findings
Lorentz torque dominates the acceleration dynamics.
Model reproduces Earth's observed Alfvén wave and acceleration ratios.
Magnetic field fluctuations are driven by convective flows.
Abstract
Azimuthal accelerations of cylindrical surfaces co-axial with the rotation axis have been inferred to exist in Earth's fluid core on the basis of magnetic field observations and changes in the length-of-day. These accelerations have a typical timescale of decades. However, the physical mechanism causing the accelerations is not well understood. Scaling arguments suggest that the leading order torque averaged over cylindrical surfaces should arise from the Lorentz force. Decadal fluctuations in the magnetic field inside the core, driven by convective flows, could then force decadal changes in the Lorentz torque and generate zonal accelerations. We test this hypothesis by constructing a quasi-geostrophic model of magnetoconvection, with thermally-driven flows perturbing a steady, imposed background magnetic field. We show that when the Alfv\'{e}n number in our model is similar to that in…
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