Title of article :
Models of magnetic field generation in partly stable planetary cores: Applications to Mercury and Saturn
Author/Authors :
Christensen، نويسنده , , Ulrich R. and Wicht، نويسنده , , Johannes، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
19
From page :
16
To page :
34
Abstract :
A substantial part of Mercuryʹs iron core may be stably stratified because the temperature gradient is subadiabatic. A dynamo would operate only in a deep sublayer. We show that such a situation arises for a wide range of values for the heat flow and the sulfur content in the core. In Saturn the upper part of the metallic hydrogen core could be stably stratified because of helium depletion. The magnetic field is unusually weak in the case of Mercury and unusually axisymmetric at Saturn. We study numerical dynamo models in rotating spherical shells with a stable outer region. The control parameters are chosen such that the magnetic Reynolds number is in the range of expected Mercury values. Because of its slow rotation, Mercury may be in a regime where the dipole contribution to the internal magnetic field is weak. Most of our models are in this regime, where the dynamo field consists mainly of rapidly varying higher multipole components. They can hardly pass the stable conducting layer because of the skin effect. The weak low-degree components vary more slowly and control the structure of the field outside the core, whose strength matches the observed field strength at Mercury. In some models the axial dipole dominates at the planetʹs surface and in others the axial quadrupole is dominant. Differential rotation in the stable layer, representing a thermal wind, is important for attenuating non-axisymmetric components in the exterior field. In some models that we relate to Saturn the axial dipole is intrinsically strong inside the dynamo. The surface field strength is much larger than in the other cases, but the stable layer eliminates non-axisymmetric modes. The Messenger and Bepi Colombo space missions can test our predictions that Mercuryʹs field is large-scaled, fairly axisymmetric, and shows no secular variations on the decadal time scale.
Keywords :
magnetic Fields , mercury , Saturn
Journal title :
Icarus
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Icarus
Record number :
2376207
Link To Document :
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