Numerical simulations of astrophysical dynamos and applications to giant planets
Albert Elias-L\'opez

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical simulations to study magnetic field generation in astrophysical systems, focusing on the interstellar medium and gas giant planets, revealing insights into dynamo behavior and magnetic evolution.
Contribution
It presents novel 3D MHD dynamo simulations for both the interstellar medium and planetary interiors, linking magnetic field evolution to planetary properties and observational prospects.
Findings
Magnetic growth from irrotational flows can seed turbulence in the ISM.
Gas giant dynamos show a slow decline in magnetic strength over time.
Hot Jupiters' magnetic fields are weaker due to altered convection and rotation.
Abstract
Magnetic fields pervade astrophysical systems and strongly influence their dynamics. Because magnetic diffusion is usually much faster than system evolution, ancient fields cannot explain the present magnetization of planets, stars, and galaxies. Instead, self-sustaining dynamos, which convert fluid motion into magnetic energy, offer the most robust explanation. Numerical magnetohydrodynamic simulations are essential to understanding this phenomenon. This thesis uses numerical models of self-excited dynamos in two contexts: the interstellar medium (ISM) and the interiors of gas giant planets. First, I use 3D MHD simulations with the Pencil Code to study magnetic growth from irrotational, subsonic expansion flows, a simplified representation of supernova-driven motions in the ISM. These curl-free flows mimic stellar explosions and winds, drive turbulence, and seed magnetic amplification.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
