Magnetic field and kinetic helicity evolution in simulations of interacting disk galaxies
Simon Selg, Wolfram Schmidt

TL;DR
This study uses magnetohydrodynamics simulations to analyze how magnetic fields and kinetic helicity evolve during galaxy interactions, revealing transient amplification driven by dynamo processes that diminish after mergers.
Contribution
It provides a detailed parameter study of magnetic field amplification and helicity evolution in interacting disk galaxies using adaptive mesh refinement simulations.
Findings
Magnetic fields peak during close encounters and mergers.
Amplification exceeds 10 microgauss in central regions.
Magnetic fields decay rapidly after galaxy coalescence.
Abstract
We carried out a parameter study of interacting disk galaxies with impact parameters ranging from central collisions to weakly interacting scenarios. The orientations of the disks were also varied. In particular, we investigated how magnetic field amplification depends on these parameters. We used magnetohydrodynamics for gas disks in combination with live dark-matter halos in adaptive mesh refinement simulations. The disks were initialized using a setup for isolated disks in hydrostatic equilibrium. Small-scale filtering of the velocity and magnetic field allowed us to estimate the turbulent electromotive force (EMF) and kinetic helicity. Time series of the average magnetic field in central and outer disk regions show pronounced peaks during close encounters and mergers. This agrees with observed magnetic fields at different interaction stages. The central field strength exceeds 10…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
