Magnetohydrodynamic turbulence concerns the chaotic regimes of magnetofluid flow at high Reynolds number. Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) deals with what is a quasi-neutral fluid with very high conductivity. The fluid approximation implies that the focus is on macro length-and-time scales which are much larger than the collision length and collision time respectively.
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Incompressible MHD equations
The incompressible MHD equations are
where u, B, p represent the velocity, magnetic, and total pressure (thermal+magnetic) fields,
The total magnetic field can be split into two parts:
The above equations in terms of Elsässer variables (
where
The important nondimensional parameters for MHD are
The magnetic Prandtl number is an important property of the fluid. Liquid metals have small magnetic Prandtl numbers, for example, liquid sodium's
The Reynolds number is the ratio of the nonlinear term
In many practical situations, the Reynolds number
The mean magnetic field plays an important role in MHD turbulence, for example it can make the turbulence anisotropic; suppress the turbulence by decreasing energy cascade etc. The earlier MHD turbulence models assumed isotropy of turbulence, while the later models have studied anisotropic aspects. In the following discussions will summarize these models. More discussions on MHD turbulence can be found in Biskamp, Verma. and Galtier.
Isotropic models
Iroshnikov and Kraichnan formulated the first phenomenological theory of MHD turbulence. They argued that in the presence of a strong mean magnetic field,
where
Later Dobrowolny et al. derived the following generalized formulas for the cascade rates of
where
Iroshnikov and Kraichnan's phenomenology follows once we choose
Marsch chose the nonlinear time scale
where
Matthaeus and Zhou attempted to combine the above two time scales by postulating the interaction time to be the harmonic mean of Alfven time and nonlinear time.
The main difference between the two competing phenomenologies (-3/2 and -5/3) is the chosen time scales for the interaction time. The main underlying assumption in that Iroshnikov and Kraichnan's phenomenology should work for strong mean magnetic field, whereas Marsh's phenomenology should work when the fluctuations dominate the mean magnetic field (strong turbulence).
However, as we will discuss below, the solar wind observations and numerical simulations tend to favour -5/3 energy spectrum even when the mean magnetic field is stronger compared to the fluctuations. This issue was resolved by Verma using renormalization group analysis by showing that the Alfvénic fluctuations are affected by scale-dependent "local mean magnetic field". The local mean magnetic field scales as
Renormalization group analysis have been also performed for computing the renormalized viscosity and resistivity. It was shown that these diffusive quantities scale as
The above phenomenologies assume isotropic turbulence that is not the case in the presence of a mean magnetic field. The mean magnetic field typically suppresses the energy cascade along the direction of the mean magnetic field.
Anisotropic models
Mean magnetic field makes turbulence anisotropic. This aspect has been studied in last two decades. In the limit
where
Under the strong turbulence limit,
The above anisotropic turbulence phenomenology has been extended for large cross helicity MHD.
Solar wind observations
Solar wind plasma is in turbulent state. Researchers have calculated the energy spectra of the solar wind plasma from the data collected from the spacecraft. The kinetic and magnetic energy spectra, as well as
Numerical simulations
The theoretical models discussed above are tested using the high resolution direct numerical simulation (DNS). Number of recent simulations report the spectral indices to be closer to 5/3. There are others that report the spectral indices near 3/2. The regime of power law is typically less than a decade. Since 5/3 and 3/2 are quite close numerically, it is quite difficult to ascertain the validity of MHD turbulence models from the energy spectra.
Energy fluxes
Anisotropic aspects of MHD turbulence have also been studied using numerical simulations. The predictions of Goldreich and Sridhar (
Energy transfer
Energy transfer among various scales between the velocity and magnetic field is an important problem in MHD turbulence. These quantities have been computed both theoretically and numerically. These calculations show a significant energy transfer from the large scale velocity field to the large scale magnetic field. Also, the cascade of magnetic energy is typically forward. These results have critical bearing on dynamo problem.
There are many open challenges in this field that hopefully will be resolved in near future with the help of numerical simulations, theoretical modelling, experiments, and observations (e.g., solar wind).