What does it mean to take the mean? The effect of the averaging scale on the characterization of interstellar turbulence
A. Konstantinou, E. Ntormousi, K. Tassis

TL;DR
This study examines how the choice of averaging scale influences the measurement and interpretation of magnetic and kinetic turbulence in simulated interstellar media, highlighting the importance of scale in turbulence characterization.
Contribution
It demonstrates that turbulence properties depend more on the averaging scale than initial magnetic conditions, affecting observational magnetic field estimates.
Findings
Turbulence ratios vary strongly with averaging radius.
Power spectra steepen with increasing smoothing scale.
Turbulence characterization depends on scale, not initial conditions.
Abstract
In interstellar medium studies, separating ordered and random velocity or magnetic fields is essential for interpreting turbulence in both simulations and observations. We investigate how the choice of averaging scale affects the measurement and characterization of magnetic and kinetic turbulence in Milky Way-sized disk galaxies with different initial magnetic morphologies. We analyze two magnetohydrodynamic simulations of isolated disk galaxies, one initialized with a toroidal magnetic field (Model T) and the other with a random field (Model R). Using spherical filtering, we decompose the magnetic and velocity fields into mean and fluctuating components while varying the averaging scale, and examine their energy ratios and power spectra as functions of time and averaging radius. Both models develop ordered and turbulent magnetic structures, whose relative strengths vary strongly with…
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