A geometric look at MHD and the Braginsky dynamo
Gilbert, AD; Vanneste, J
Date: 12 November 2020
Journal
Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This paper considers magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) and some of its applications from
the perspective of differential geometry, considering the dynamics of an ideal fluid flow
and magnetic field on a general three-dimensional manifold, equipped with a metric and
an induced volume form. The benefit of this level of abstraction is that ...
This paper considers magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) and some of its applications from
the perspective of differential geometry, considering the dynamics of an ideal fluid flow
and magnetic field on a general three-dimensional manifold, equipped with a metric and
an induced volume form. The benefit of this level of abstraction is that it clarifies basic
aspects of fluid dynamics such as how certain quantities are transported, how they transform
under the action of mappings (for example the flow map between Lagrangian labels and
Eulerian positions), how conservation laws arise, and the origin of certain approximations
that preserve the mathematical structure of classical mechanics.
First, the governing equations for ideal MHD are derived in a general setting by means
of an action principle, and making use of Lie derivatives. The way in which these equations
transform under a pull back, by the map taking the position of a fluid parcel to a background
location, is detailed. This is then used to parameterise Alfv´en waves using concepts of pseudomomentum and pseudofield, in parallel with the development of Generalised Lagrangian
Mean theory in hydrodynamics. Finally non-ideal MHD is considered with a sketch of the
development of the Braginsky αω-dynamo in a general setting. Expressions for the α-tensor
are obtained, including a novel geometric formulation in terms of connection coefficients,
and related to formulae found elsewhere in the literature.
Mathematics and Statistics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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