Linear and nonlinear dynamics of liquid planetary cores
Abstract
This is the 50th anniversary of Ed Lorenz brilliant paper "Deterministic Nonperiodic Flow.'' Lorenz's work, along with many other founders' efforts, gave rise to the study of nonlinear dynamics. That field has allowed us to move beyond simple linear characterizations of nature, and to open up a deeper understanding of the Earth, other planets, and stars. Of the many things that make the Earth a habitable home, one is the existence of a planetary magnetic field generated in our liquid iron outer core. The generation process is known to be strongly nonlinear, and thereby almost certainly turbulent. Yet it is not a simple homogeneous isotropic turbulent flow, but is instead heavily modified by rotation and magnetic forces. We attempt to better understand the Earth's core using a three-meter liquid sodium laboratory model of the core. Our work in sodium in this system has just begun. The system exhibits a variety of behaviors with at least twelve different states, drawing different amounts of power, and causing varying levels of magnetic field amplification. In some states, rotation and magnetic fields cause the dynamics to simplify relative to more general turbulent flows in comparable conditions. Acknowledgements: I gratefully acknowledge my collaborators Daniel Zimmerman, Santiago Triana, Donald Martin, Nolan Balew, Henri-Claude Nataf, and Barbara Brawn-Cinani, and funding from the National Science Foundation Earth Sciences Instrumentation and Geophysics programs.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFMNG34A..01L
- Keywords:
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- 4490 NONLINEAR GEOPHYSICS Turbulence;
- 1510 GEOMAGNETISM AND PALEOMAGNETISM Dynamo: theories and simulations;
- 5430 PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS Interiors;
- 4430 NONLINEAR GEOPHYSICS Complex systems