Scale-dependence of magnetic helicity in the solar wind
by
Axel Brandenburg(Nordita)
→
Europe/Stockholm
122:026
122:026
Description
We determine the magnetic helicity, along with the magnetic energy, at high latitudes
using data from the Ulysses mission. The dataset spans the time period from
1993 to 1996. The
basic assumption of the analysis is that the solar wind is homogeneous.
Because the solar wind speed is high, we follow the
approach first pioneered by Matthaeus et al.
(1982, Phys. Rev. Lett. 48, 1256) by which, under the assumption
of spatial homogeneity, one can use Fourier transforms of the magnetic
field time series to construct one-dimensional spectra of the magnetic
energy and magnetic helicity under the assumption that the Taylor frozen-in-flow hypothesis is valid. That is a well-satisfied assumption for the data used in this study. The magnetic helicity derives from the skew-symmetric terms of the
three-dimensional magnetic correlation tensor, while the symmetric terms of the tensor are used to determine the magnetic energy spectrum.
Our results show a sign change of magnetic helicity at
wavenumber k~AU^{-1} at distances below 2.8 AU and at
k~30 AU^{-1} at larger distances.
At small scales the magnetic helicity is positive at northern heliographic
latitudes and negative at southern latitudes.
The positive magnetic helicity at small scales is argued to be the result
of turbulent diffusion reversing the sign relative to what is seen
at small scales at the solar surface.
Furthermore, the magnetic helicity declines toward solar minimum in 1996.
The magnetic helicity flux integrated separately over one hemisphere
amounts to about 10^{45} Mx^2/cycle at large scales and to a 3 times
lower value at smaller scales.
Brandenburg, A., Subramanian, K., Balogh, A., & Goldstein, M. L.: 2011, ``Scale-dependence of magnetic helicity in the solar wind,'' Astrophys. J., submitted
(arXiv:1101.1709, HTML, PDF)