MHD turbulence
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Curator: Dr. Peter Goldreich, Institute for Advanced Study
MHD turbulence describes turbulence in an electrically conducting,
magnetized fluid (Biskamp 2003). Strictly speaking, MHD only applies to
collision dominated fluids. However, it is often a useful guide to
the behavior of magnetized plasmas even in the collisionless limit.
Turbulence is a generic property of large scale fluid
flows. Hydrodynamic (HD) turbulence is a familiar phenomenon. Flows of
human dimensions commonly reach high Reynolds numbers; values in
excess of
are achieved in the air we push aside when we walk
and in the water we disturb when we swim. By contrast, the limited
electrical conductivity of available fluids makes it difficult to
excite flows with high magnetic Reynolds numbers in terrestrial
laboratories.
Nature routinely produces MHD turbulence. Ionized gas pervades the regions between and within galaxies and inside stars. On large scales even modest velocities imply enormous hydrodynamic and magnetic Reynolds numbers. In the absence of stable stratification, these flows must be turbulent with frozen in magnetic fields. It is likely that most of the baryonic matter in the universe is in a state of MHD turbulence.
The evolution of a weak magnetic field in isotropic MHD turbulence poses an interesting problem. By stretching magnetic field lines, turbulence tends to increase magnetic energy, but by creating small scale structures, it enhances the rate of ohmic dissipation. Evidence from analytic models (Kazantsev 1968) and numerical simulations implies that the magnetic energy increases, but the level at which it saturates and the dependence on magnetic Prandtl number of the scale at which it peaks have yet to be firmly established. These issues fall within the purview of dynamo theory (Brandenburg & Subramanian 2005).
A short article cannot adequately cover all aspects of MHD turbulence. Verma (2004) provides a more detailed review. The choice made here is to focus on the inertial range of turbulent cascades in incompressible MHD. This is an active topic of current research in which analytical models and numerical simulations play leading roles. Guidance is provided by in situ measurements of velocity and magnetic field fluctuations in the solar wind (Goldstein, Roberts & Matthaeus 1995), and indirectly by scintillations of small angular diameter radio sources which reveal the spectra of interplanetary and interstellar electron density fluctuations (Rickett 1990). On the scales of interest, both interplanetary and interstellar plasmas are collisionless. Additional astrophysical implications of MHD turbulence are described in Cho, Lazarian & Vishniac (2003).
Contents |
Incompressible MHD Turbulence
Incompressible MHD is described by two solenoidal vector
fields, the velocity,
, and the magnetic intensity,
. These must simultaneously satisfy the Navier Stokes and induction
equations. It might seem that the addition of the induction equation
would make MHD turbulence a much harder problem than HD turbulence. It
is certainly richer, offering a greater variety of solutions than HD
turbulence. However, in some ways it is also simpler to
analyze. Unlike HD turbulence, MHD turbulence has a weak limit which
is amenable to perturbation theory. This is a consequence of the
existence of linear MHD waves. In the incompressible limit, these are
of two types, referred to as shear and pseudo Alfvén
waves. The latter is the incompressible vestige of the slow
mode of compressible MHD. The displacement vector of a shear Alfvén wave
is perpendicular to the plane defined by its wave vector,
,
and a uniform background magnetic field,
,
whereas that of a pseudo Alfvén wave lies in this plane. The two wave modes share the dispersion relation,
- (1)
and propagate with group velocity,
, either parallel or
antiparallel to
depending upon the sign of
.
Three properties of incompressible MHD form the bulwark of current models of MHD turbulence. In the limit of vanishing viscosity and resistivity:
- Wavepackets which propagate in one direction along the magnetic field are exact solutions of the nonlinear equations of MHD.
- Collisions between oppositely directed wave packets cause distortions that give rise to the turbulent cascade.
- Wavepackets do not exchange energy when they collide.
The first and second items are immediate consequences of the equations
of ideal MHD written in terms of Elsässer variables,
, where
is the magnetic fluctuation
about a uniform background field expressed in velocity units according to
.
with
- (3)
The third is a consequence of the separate conservation of energy
- (4)
and cross helicity
- (5)
In this article inertial range cascades are characterized by
one-dimensional (1D) energy spectra,
, or equivalently, by rms velocity or magnetic field differences across separation
. These are related by
. The choice
of
or
as an
independent variable is made because MHD cascades are anisotropic; gradients are steeper in directions perpendicular to the
background magnetic field than they are parallel to it.
Where needed, the parallel extent of a wave packet with perpendicular
dimension
is denoted by
. A convenient
measure of nonlinearity is the ratio of the
nonlinear strain rate,
, to the linear wave frequency,
;
- (6)
The concept of the background magnetic field in MHD turbulence requires elaboration. Nonlinear interactions involving fluctuations of scale
are referred to a background field obtained by averaging the magnetic field over a scale a few times larger than
. This is referred to as the local mean magnetic field on scale
. Although somewhat ad hoc, this practice proves crucial for relating predictions of analytic models with results from numerical simulations (Cho & Vishniac 2000, Maron & Goldreich 2001, Cho, Vishniac & Lazarian 2002). It is not known whether there are examples of inertial range MHD turbulence that don't involve an effectively uniform background magnetic field.
Iroshnikov (1963) and Kraichnan (1965) pioneered the application of the above
properties together with the assumption of spatial isotropy,
, to derive a 1D inertial range spectrum,
or
, for MHD turbulence.
They explicitly assumed the presence of a local mean magnetic field. IK's cascade is an
example of weak turbulence because wave packets undergo multiple
collisions before being significantly deformed. The nonlinearity of
the IK cascade weakens toward smaller scales,
, so its inertial range could be
arbitrary long. Only dissipation would terminate it. The IK model has since
been superseded by others which do not assume spatial isotropy. Otherwise,
the principles upon which it was based have endured.
Shebalin, Matthaeus & Montgomery (1983) proved that the assumption of isotropy in the presence of a background magnetic field is inconsistent with the frequency and wave vector closure relations of resonant triads;
Their argument is as follows. Since
, equation
(7) and the
component
of equation (8) yield
Because nonlinear interactions are restricted to waves which propagate
in opposite directions, a nonzero 3-mode coupling coefficient requires
that
and
have opposite signs. In
this case, adding equations (9) and
(10) proves that either
or
must vanish. Since one incoming wave has zero
frequency, 3-wave interactions do not transfer energy along
. More generally, numerical simulations with
isotropic excitation on large scales produce small scale fluctuations
that are elongated parallel to the local mean magnetic field (e.g., Cho &
Vishniac 2000).
Steady-State Cascades
Current knowledge about steady-state turbulent MHD cascades is
summarized below. These cascades are
anisotropic; energy is transferred more rapidly along
than
along
. Wave packets are distorted as they move along
magnetic field lines perturbed by counter propagating waves.
mapping between planes oriented perpendicular to the guide field and separated along it. Shear Alfvén waves are responsible for the mapping's shear and pseudo Alfvén waves for its dilatation. Once the anisotropy becomes pronounced, the shear exceeds the dilatation (Goldreich & Sridhar 1997). This accounts for the dominance of shear Alfvén waves in controlling the cascades of both shear and pseudo Alfvén waves. The latter play a passive role (Maron & Goldreich 2001).
The applicability of MHD turbulence to collisionless plasmas is made plausible by the dominance of shear Alfven waves (Schekochihin, Cowley & Dorland 2007). Unlike compressive MHD waves, shear Alfvén waves do not suffer linear damping due to interactions with resonant particles (Barnes 1966).
Cascades with equal fluxes of energy directed parallel and antiparallel to the ambient magnetic field are called balanced. They are simpler both to analyze and to describe than imbalanced cascades. Scaling arguments, which go a long way toward characterizing balanced cascades, are less potent when applied to imbalanced ones.
weak MHD cascades
Weak MHD turbulence is well-characterized. Three wave interactions are
dominant (Ng & Bhattacharjee 1996). There is no cascade along
.
Individual waves survive for many collisions; this is why the
turbulence is called weak. Weak cascades strengthen toward larger
. In the absence of dissipation, they ultimately become
strong.
weak balanced cascades
The principal features of weak, balanced cascades follow from scaling
arguments (Goldreich & Sridhar 1997, Ng & Bhattacharjee 1997). The
1D energy spectrum is a power law,
or
. The nonlinearity parameter
increases toward smaller scales,
;
if not terminated by dissipation, the weak balanced cascade becomes strong.
weak imbalanced cascades
Perturbation theory is required to determine the
structure of weak imbalance cascades. Individual 1D energy spectra of
oppositely directed waves are power laws in
. Scaling arguments merely constrain the sum of
the indices of the individual 1D energy spectra to total
4. Kinetic equations derived from perturbation theory
show that the 1D energy spectrum of the dominant waves is steeper than
that of the subdominant ones; in the limit of infinite flux ratio, the
indices are 3 and 1 (Galtier et al. 2000, 2002). Provided dissipation terminates the cascade before it
becomes strong, the energy densities of the oppositely directed waves
reach equality at the dissipation scale (Grappin, Leorat & Pouquet 1983, Lithwick
& Goldreich 2003). This has the remarkable consequence that in the
approach to a steady-state, there is feedback from the
dissipation scale to the outer scale.
strong MHD cascades
Strong cascades are of particular interest for applications in natural
settings because weak ones strengthen with decreasing
. Analytical tools are of limited value when applied to
strong cascades. Scaling arguments combined with numerical simulations
have led to considerable progress but crucial issues remain
unresolved.
strong balanced cascades
An undamped weak cascade transitions to a strong one as
approaches unity. Recall that for the weak
balanced cascade
. The
hypothesis of critical balance states that
is of order unity throughout the inertial
range of the strong cascade (Goldreich & Sridhar 1995). In other words, in a strong balanced
cascade, MHD waves suffer order unity distortions on time scales
comparable to their periods. Two arguments have been made for the
saturation of
.
- 1) The frequency closure relation, equation (7), cannot be satisfied to better than the cascade rate. Thus strong interactions must be accompanied by an increase in frequency and hence a decrease in the parallel scale
.
- 2) If
were larger than unity, then motions with perpendicular scale
on planes separated by parallel scale
would proceed faster than Alfvén waves could couple them. Thus these distortions would proceed independently causing
to decrease.
Critical balance based on the cascade rate
leads to
an anisotropic cascade in which eddies with perpendicular scale
extend
a distance
along the local mean magnetic field; the anisotropy increases with decreasing scale. This scaling was anticipated by Higdon (1984).
Although the turbulence is strong in the sense that the MHD waves are critically
damped, deep in the inertial range the energy in turbulent fluctuations is smaller than that in the background magnetic field by the factor
.
The 1D energy spectrum mimics the Kolmogorov spectrum of incompressible HD
turbulence,
.
Numerical simulations offer support for critical balance, scale
dependent anisotropy, and the dominance of shear Alfvén
waves (Cho & Vishniac 2000, Maron & Goldreich 2001, Cho, Lazarian & Vishniac 2002).
However, in the presence of a strong guide field they yield energy spectra
with
closer to 3/2 than 5/3
(Maron & Goldreich 2001, Müller, Biskamp & Grappin 2003, Müller & Grappin 2005, Mason, Cattaneo & Boldyrev 2008). The flattening
of the energy spectrum implies a weakening with decreasing scale of the nonlinear interactions that
drive the casade. Boldyrev (2005, 2006) proposed that the nonlinear interactions weaken because of dynamic alignment, the
progressive alignment or anti-alignment of velocity and magnetic field fluctuations.
For
- (11)
the nonlinear interaction rate weakens by a factor
. Since
- (12)
dynamic alignment is equivalent to a local imbalance that increases
with decreasing scale.
, or equivalently,
follows provided
. Dynamic alignment at about this level has been observed in a variety of numerical simulations (Beresnyak & Lazarian 2006, Mason, Cattaneo & Boldyrev 2008).
strong imbalanced cascades
Strong imbalance turbulence is expected to be the dominant form of MHD
turbulence in nature. Turbulence in the solar wind is both strong and
imbalanced. A few models of strong imbalanced turbulence have been
proposed (Lithwick, Goldreich & Sridhar 2006, Beresnyak & Lazarian 2008, Chandran 2008, Perez &
Boldyrev 2009). It is too early to critically assess them given that
critical issues involving strong balanced cascades remain unresolved. Nevertheless, four key
questions are worth raising.
- Do the dominant and subdominant modes have the same spectral slopes?
- Does critical balance apply to either or both of the dominant and subdominant fluxes?
- Are the energy densities of the dominant and subdominant modes pinned at the dissipation scale?
- What role does dynamic alignment play?
References
Beresnyak, A. & Lazarian, A. (2006), Polarization Intermittency and Its Influence on MHD Turbulence, Astrophysical Journal, 640, L175-L178. ApJ
Beresnyak, A. & Lazarian, A. (2008), Strong Imbalanced Turbulence, arXiv:0709.0554v2. astro-ph
Boldyrev, S. (2005), On the Spectrum of Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence, Astrophysical Journal, 626, L37-L40, ApJ
Boldyrev, S. (2006), Spectrum of Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence, Physical Review Letters, 96, 115002 (1-4). astro-ph
Chandran, B. D. G. (2008), Strong Anisotropic MHD Turbulence with Cross Helicity, arXiv:0801.4903. astro-ph
Cho, J. & Vishniac, E. T. (2000), The Anisotropy of Magnetohydrodynamic Alfvénic Turbulence, Astrophysical Journal, 539, 273-282. ApJ
Cho, J., Lazarian, A. & Vishniac, E. T. (2002), Simulations of Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence in a Strongly Magnetized Medium, Astrophysical Journal, 564, 291-301. ApJ
Cho, J., Lazarian, A. & Vishniac, E. T. (2003), MHD Turbulence: Scaling Laws and Astrophysical Implications, Lecture Notes in Physics, 614, 56-98. ADS
Galtier, S., Nazarenko, S. V., Newell, A. C. & Pouquet, A. (2000), A weak turbulence theory for incompressible magnetohydrodynamics, Journal of Plasma Physics, 63, 447-488. astro-ph
Galtier, S., Nazarenko, S. V., Newell, A. C. & Pouquet, A. (2002), Anisotropic Turbulence of Shear-Alfvén Waves, Astrophysical Jounal, 564, L49-L52. ApJ
Goldreich, P. & Sridhar, S. (1995), Toward a theory of interstellar turbulence. 2: Strong Alfvénic turbulence, Astrophysical Journal, 438, 763-775. ApJ
Goldreich, P. & Sridhar, S. (1997), Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence Revisited, Astrophysical Jounal, 485, 680-688.ApJ
Grappin, R., Leorat, J. & Pouquet, A. (1983), Dependence of MHD turbulence spectra on the velocity field-magnetic field correlation, Astronomy & Astrophysics, 126, 51-58. ADS
Iroshnikov, P. S. (1964), Turbulence of a Conducting Fluid in a Strong Magnetic Field, Soviet Astronomy, 7, 566-571. Translated from Astronomicheskii Zhurnal, 40, 742-750, (1963). ADS
Kraichnan, R. (1965), Inertial-Range Spectrum of Hydromagnetic Turbulence, Physics of Fluids, 8, 1385-1387. Sci
Lithwick, Y. & Goldreich, P. (2003), Imbalanced Weak Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence, Astrophysical Jounal, 582, 1220–1240. ApJ
Lithwick, Y., Goldreich, P. & Sridhar, S. (2006), Imbalanced Strong MHD Turbulence, Astrophysical Jounal, 655, 269-274. ApJ
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Müller, W., & Grappin, R. (2005), Spectral Energy Dynamics in Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence, Physical Review Letters, 95, 114502 (1-4). [1]
Ng, C. S. & Bhattacharjee, A. (1996), Interaction of Shear-Alfvén Wave Packets: Implication for Weak Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence in Astrophysical Plasmas, Astrophysical Journal, 465, 845-854. ADS
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Shebalin, J.V., Matthaeus, W.H. & Montgomery, D. (1983), Anisotropy in MHD turbulence due to a mean magnetic field, Journal of Plasma Physics, 29, 525-547. ADS
Recommended reading
Barnes, A. (1966), Collisionless Damping of Hydromagnetic Waves, Physics of Fluids, 9, 1483-1495.
Biskamp, D. (2003), Magnetohydrodynamical Turbulence, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge).
Brandenburg, A. & Subramanian, K. (2005), Astrophysical magnetic fields and nonlinear dynamo theory, Physics Reports 417, 1-209. ADS
Goldstein, M. L., Roberts, D. A. & Matthaeus, W. H. (1995), Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence In The Solar Wind, Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 33, 283-326. ARA&A
Higdon, J.C. (1984), Density fluctuations in the interstellar medium: Evidence for anisotropic magnetogasdynamic turbulence. I - Model and astrophysical sites, 285, 109-123. ApJ
Kazantsev, A.P. (1968), Enhancement of a magnetic field by a conducting fluid, Soviet Physics (JETP), 26, 1031-1034.
Rickett, B. J. (1990), Radio propagation through the turbulent interstellar plasma, Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 28, 561-605. ARA&A
Schekochihin, A. A., Cowley, S. C. & Dorland, W. (2007), Interplanetary and interstellar plasma turbulence, Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, 49, A195-A209. arXiv
Verma, M. K. (2004), Statistical theory of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, Phys. Rep., 401, 229-380. [3]
See also
_AUTOLINKER{1|stable|vector fields|averaging |linear wave|kinetic equation}
| Peter Goldreich (2009) MHD turbulence. Scholarpedia, 4(2):2350, (go to the first approved version) Created: 3 November 2006, reviewed: 8 February 2009, accepted: 8 February 2009 |

