Magnetic helicity: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Measure of magnetic field topology}} | {{Short description|Measure of magnetic field topology}} | ||
{{ | {{Infobox unit | ||
| name = Magnetic helicity | |||
| image = | |||
| caption = | |||
| quantity = [[Plasma physics]], [[Magnetohydrodynamics]] | |||
| symbol = {{math|''H''<sup>'''M'''</sup>}} | |||
| standard = [[Weber (unit)|Wb]]<sup>2</sup> ([[SI]]), [[Maxwell (unit)|Mx]]<sup>2</sup> ([[Gaussian units|Gaussian]]) | |||
| extralabel = Dimension | |||
| extradata = {{math|[M L<sup>4</sup> T<sup>−2</sup> I<sup>−2</sup>]}} | |||
| extralabel2 = Conserved | |||
| extradata2 = Yes (in ideal MHD) | |||
}} | |||
In [[plasma physics]], '''magnetic helicity''' is a measure of the linkage, twist, and writhe of a [[magnetic field]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Cantarella|first1=Jason|chapter=Influence of Geometry and Topology on Helicity|date=2013-03-19|title=Magnetic Helicity in Space and Laboratory Plasmas|pages=17–24|place=Washington, D. C.|publisher=American Geophysical Union|isbn=978-1-118-66447-6|last2=Deturck|first2=Dennis|last3=Gluck|first3=Herman|last4=Teytel|first4=Mikhail|doi=10.1029/gm111p0017}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last=Moffatt|first=H. K.|date=1969-01-16|title=The degree of knottedness of tangled vortex lines|journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics|volume=35|issue=1|pages=117–129|doi=10.1017/s0022112069000991|bibcode=1969JFM....35..117M|s2cid=121478573 |issn=0022-1120}}</ref> | |||
When a magnetic field contains magnetic helicity, it | Magnetic helicity is used to analyze systems with very low resistivity, including many astrophysical environments. When resistivity is low, magnetic helicity is approximately conserved over long timescales. Magnetic helicity dynamics are important in studies of [[solar flare]]s and [[coronal mass ejection|coronal mass ejections]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Low|first=B. C.|chapter=Magnetohydrodynamic Processes in the Solar Corona: Flares, Coronal Mass Ejections and Magnetic Helicity|date=1996|chapter-url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-0265-7_7|title=Solar and Astrophysical Magnetohydrodynamic Flows|pages=133–149|place=Dordrecht|publisher=Springer Netherlands|doi=10.1007/978-94-009-0265-7_7|isbn=978-94-010-6603-7|access-date=2020-10-08}}</ref> It is relevant in the dynamics of the [[solar wind]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Bieber|first1=J. W.|last2=Evenson|first2=P. A.|last3=Matthaeus|first3=W. H.|date=April 1987|title=Magnetic helicity of the Parker field|journal=The Astrophysical Journal|volume=315|page=700|doi=10.1086/165171|bibcode=1987ApJ...315..700B|issn=0004-637X|doi-access=free}}</ref> Its approximate conservation is significant in [[Dynamo theory|dynamo]] processes. It also plays a role in [[Fusion power|fusion research]], including [[reversed field pinch]] experiments.<ref name=":2">{{cite journal|last=Blackman|first=E.G.|date=2015|title=Magnetic Helicity and Large Scale Magnetic Fields: A Primer|journal=[[Space Science Reviews]]|volume=188|issue=1–4|pages=59–91|arxiv=1402.0933|bibcode=2015SSRv..188...59B|doi=10.1007/s11214-014-0038-6|s2cid=17015601}}</ref><ref> | ||
{{cite journal|last=Brandenburg|first=A.|date=2009|title=Hydromagnetic Dynamo Theory|journal=[[Scholarpedia]]|volume=2|issue=3|page=2309|bibcode=2007SchpJ...2.2309B|doi=10.4249/scholarpedia.2309|id=rev #73469|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Brandenburg|first1=A.|author2-link=Alexandre Lazarian|last2=Lazarian|first2=A.|date=2013-08-31|title=Astrophysical Hydromagnetic Turbulence|journal=Space Science Reviews|volume=178|issue=2–4|pages=163–200|arxiv=1307.5496|doi=10.1007/s11214-013-0009-3|bibcode=2013SSRv..178..163B|s2cid=16261037|issn=0038-6308}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Vishniac|first1=Ethan T.|last2=Cho|first2=Jungyeon|date=April 2001|title=Magnetic Helicity Conservation and Astrophysical Dynamos|journal=The Astrophysical Journal|volume=550|issue=2|pages=752–760|doi=10.1086/319817|arxiv=astro-ph/0010373|bibcode=2001ApJ...550..752V|issn=0004-637X|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Escande|first1=D. F.|last2=Martin|first2=P.|last3=Ortolani|first3=S.|last4=Buffa|first4=A.|last5=Franz|first5=P.|last6=Marrelli|first6=L.|last7=Martines|first7=E.|last8=Spizzo|first8=G.|last9=Cappello|first9=S.|last10=Murari|first10=A.|last11=Pasqualotto|first11=R.|date=2000-08-21|title=Quasi-Single-Helicity Reversed-Field-Pinch Plasmas|journal=Physical Review Letters|volume=85|issue=8|pages=1662–1665|doi=10.1103/physrevlett.85.1662|pmid=10970583|bibcode=2000PhRvL..85.1662E|issn=0031-9007}}</ref> | |||
When a magnetic field contains magnetic helicity, it can drive the formation of large-scale structures from small-scale ones.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Frisch|first1=U.|last2=Pouquet|first2=A.|last3=LÉOrat|first3=J.|last4=Mazure|first4=A.|date=1975-04-29|title=Possibility of an inverse cascade of magnetic helicity in magnetohydrodynamic turbulence|journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics|volume=68|issue=4|pages=769–778|doi=10.1017/s002211207500122x|bibcode=1975JFM....68..769F|s2cid=45460069 |issn=0022-1120}}</ref> This process is referred to as inverse transfer in [[Fourier space]]. In three dimensions, magnetic helicity supports growth toward larger scales. In contrast, many three-dimensional flows in ordinary fluid mechanics are turbulent and exhibit a direct cascade in which large-scale [[Vortex|vortices]] [[Energy cascade|break up]] into smaller ones that dissipate through [[Viscosity|viscous]] effects. By a parallel but inverted process, small helical magnetic structures with nonzero magnetic helicity combine to form large-scale magnetic fields. This behavior is observed in the dynamics of the [[heliospheric current sheet]],<ref name=":0"> | |||
{{cite journal|last1=Berger|first1=M.A.|date=1999|title=Introduction to magnetic helicity|journal=[[Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion]]|volume=41|issue=12B|pages=B167–B175|bibcode=1999PPCF...41B.167B|doi=10.1088/0741-3335/41/12B/312|s2cid=250734282 }}</ref> a large magnetic structure in the [[Solar System]]. | {{cite journal|last1=Berger|first1=M.A.|date=1999|title=Introduction to magnetic helicity|journal=[[Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion]]|volume=41|issue=12B|pages=B167–B175|bibcode=1999PPCF...41B.167B|doi=10.1088/0741-3335/41/12B/312|s2cid=250734282 }}</ref> a large magnetic structure in the [[Solar System]]. | ||
== History == | |||
The concept of helicity emerged in the mid-20th century within [[fluid dynamics]], where British fluid dynamicist [[Keith Moffatt|H. K. Moffatt]] connected the knottedness of [[vortex]] lines to a conserved integral he termed helicity.<ref name="Moffatt1969">{{Citation | last=Moffatt | first=H. K. | title=The degree of knottedness of tangled vortex lines | journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics | volume=35 | issue=1 | pages=117–129 | year=1969 | doi=10.1017/S0022112069000991 }}</ref> In [[magnetohydrodynamics]], Dutch-American astrophysicist [[Lodewijk Woltjer]] proved that magnetic helicity is an [[Invariant theory|ideal invariant]] and characterized minimum energy states at fixed helicity. German-American geophysicist [[Walter M. Elsasser]]'s [[dynamo theory|dynamo]] work provided an early theoretical foundation for such invariants in cosmic magnetism.<ref name="Woltjer1958">{{Citation | last=Woltjer | first=L. | title=A Theorem on Force-Free Magnetic Fields | journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume=44 | issue=6 | pages=489–491 | year=1958 | doi=10.1073/pnas.44.6.489 | pmc=528606 }}</ref><ref name="Elsasser1956">{{Citation | last=Elsasser | first=Walter M. | title=Hydromagnetic Dynamo Theory | journal=Reviews of Modern Physics | volume=28 | issue=2 | pages=135–163 | year=1956 | doi=10.1103/RevModPhys.28.135 }}</ref> | |||
During the 1970s and 1980s, the concept was further developed through advances in [[turbulence]] theory, laboratory [[plasma physics|plasma]] experiments, and [[topology]]. [[Uriel Frisch]] and collaborators predicted an [[energy cascade|inverse transfer]] of magnetic helicity toward larger scales, which was later confirmed numerically and interpreted as a pathway to self-organization in [[magnetohydrodynamic turbulence|magnetized turbulence]].<ref name="Frisch1975">{{Citation | last1=Frisch | first1=U. | last2=Pouquet | first2=A. | last3=Léorat | first3=J. | last4=Mazure | first4=A. | title=Possibility of an inverse cascade of magnetic helicity in magnetohydrodynamic turbulence | journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics | volume=68 | issue=4 | pages=769–778 | year=1975 | doi=10.1017/S002211207500122X }}</ref> American plasma physicist [[J. B. Taylor]] introduced [[Taylor state|relaxation theory]] for confined plasmas, arguing that low [[electrical resistivity and conductivity|resistivity]] allows rapid relaxation to a [[force-free magnetic field|force-free state]] that preserves helicity. He emphasized that during relaxation "only total magnetic helicity survives."<ref name="Taylor1974">{{Citation | last=Taylor | first=J. B. | title=Relaxation of Toroidal Plasma and Generation of Reversed Magnetic Fields | journal=Physical Review Letters | volume=33 | pages=1139–1141 | year=1974 | doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.33.1139 }}</ref><ref name="Taylor1986">{{Citation | last=Taylor | first=J. B. | title=Relaxation and magnetic reconnection in plasmas | journal=Reviews of Modern Physics | volume=58 | pages=741–763 | year=1986 | doi=10.1103/RevModPhys.58.741 }}</ref> On the topological front, American mathematician Mitchell A. Berger and American astrophysicist [[George B. Field]] introduced relative magnetic helicity to extend the invariant to volumes with [[magnetic flux]] crossing their boundaries. American plasma physicists John M. Finn and [[Thomas M. Antonsen Jr.]] provided an equivalent [[gauge theory|gauge-invariant]] expression, describing a "general gauge invariant definition."<ref name="BergerField1984">{{Citation | last1=Berger | first1=Mitchell A. | last2=Field | first2=George B. | title=The topological properties of magnetic helicity | journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics | volume=147 | pages=133–148 | year=1984 | doi=10.1017/S0022112084002019 }}</ref><ref name="FinnAntonsen1985">{{Citation | last1=Finn | first1=John M. | last2=Antonsen | first2=Thomas M. | title=Magnetic helicity: What is it and what is it good for? | journal=Comments on Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | volume=9 | pages=111–126 | year=1985 }}</ref> | |||
From the 1990s onward, magnetic helicity became an important observational and diagnostic tool in [[solar physics]] and [[space physics]]. German solar physicist Norbert Seehafer reported that [[current helicity]] in [[solar active region|active regions]] is "predominantly negative in the northern" and "positive in the southern hemisphere," establishing an empirical hemispheric rule that motivated extensive follow-up research.<ref name="Seehafer1990">{{Citation | last=Seehafer | first=N. | title=Electric current helicity in the solar atmosphere | journal=Solar Physics | volume=125 | pages=219–232 | year=1990 | doi=10.1007/BF00158402 }}</ref> American solar physicists Alexei A. Pevtsov, Richard C. Canfield, and [[Thomas R. Metcalf]] mapped helicity patterns in active regions and demonstrated its latitudinal variation, helping to connect [[photosphere|photospheric]] measurements to [[solar corona|coronal]] dynamics and [[coronal mass ejection|ejections]].<ref name="Pevtsov1994">{{Citation | last1=Pevtsov | first1=A. A. | last2=Canfield | first2=R. C. | last3=Metcalf | first3=T. R. | title=Patterns of Helicity in Solar Active Regions | journal=The Astrophysical Journal Letters | volume=425 | pages=L117–L119 | year=1994 | doi=10.1086/187324 }}</ref><ref name="Pevtsov1995">{{Citation | last1=Pevtsov | first1=A. A. | last2=Canfield | first2=R. C. | last3=Metcalf | first3=T. R. | title=Latitudinal Variation of Helicity of Photospheric Magnetic Fields | journal=The Astrophysical Journal Letters | volume=440 | pages=L109–L112 | year=1995 | doi=10.1086/187773 }}</ref> Analyses of the [[solar wind]] and [[heliosphere]] used helicity to interpret large-scale magnetic structure and transport.<ref name="Bieber1987">{{Citation | last1=Bieber | first1=J. W. | last2=Evenson | first2=P. A. | last3=Matthaeus | first3=W. H. | title=Magnetic helicity of the Parker field | journal=The Astrophysical Journal | volume=315 | pages=700–705 | year=1987 | doi=10.1086/165171 }}</ref> | |||
Scientists have debated how best to define and measure helicity in realistic, open systems and how to interpret local proxies. Relative magnetic helicity is now the standard approach for volumes with flux crossing the boundary, while [[current helicity]] and other proxies are used when full three-dimensional measurements are unavailable.<ref name="BergerField1984" /><ref name="FinnAntonsen1985" /><ref name="Berger1999">{{Citation | last=Berger | first=M. A. | title=Introduction to magnetic helicity | journal=Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | volume=41 | issue=12B | pages=B167–B175 | year=1999 | doi=10.1088/0741-3335/41/12B/312 }}</ref> Ongoing discussions address [[gauge theory|gauge]] issues and whether a meaningful local helicity density can be defined in weakly inhomogeneous [[turbulence]], leading to proposed gauge-invariant local measures and improved numerical diagnostics.<ref name="SubramanianBrandenburg2006">{{Citation | last1=Subramanian | first1=K. | last2=Brandenburg | first2=Axel | title=Magnetic helicity density and its flux in weakly inhomogeneous turbulence | journal=The Astrophysical Journal Letters | volume=648 | pages=L71–L74 | year=2006 | doi=10.1086/507828 | arxiv=astro-ph/0509392 }}</ref> In [[dynamo theory]], magnetic helicity conservation constrains the growth of large-scale fields. Research on helicity fluxes and open boundaries suggests that such fluxes can relax these constraints, a perspective developed in astrophysical dynamo modeling.<ref name="VishniacCho2001">{{Citation | last1=Vishniac | first1=Ethan T. | last2=Cho | first2=Jungyeon | title=Magnetic Helicity Conservation and Astrophysical Dynamos | journal=The Astrophysical Journal | volume=550 | issue=2 | pages=752–760 | year=2001 | doi=10.1086/319817 | arxiv=astro-ph/0010373 }}</ref><ref name="BrandenburgSubramanian2005">{{Citation | last1=Brandenburg | first1=Axel | last2=Subramanian | first2=Kandaswamy | title=Astrophysical magnetic fields and nonlinear dynamo theory | journal=Physics Reports | volume=417 | issue=1–4 | pages=1–209 | year=2005 | doi=10.1016/j.physrep.2005.06.005 | arxiv=astro-ph/0405052 }}</ref><ref name="Blackman2015">{{Citation | last=Blackman | first=E. G. | title=Magnetic helicity and large scale magnetic fields: A primer | journal=Space Science Reviews | volume=188 | issue=1–4 | pages=59–91 | year=2015 | doi=10.1007/s11214-014-0038-6 | arxiv=1402.0933 }}</ref> | |||
== Mathematical definition == | == Mathematical definition == | ||
Generally, the helicity <math>H^{\mathbf f}</math> of a smooth [[vector field]] <math>\mathbf f</math> confined to a volume <math>V</math> is | Generally, the helicity <math>H^{\mathbf f}</math> of a smooth [[vector field]] <math>\mathbf f</math> confined to a volume <math>V</math> is a measure of the extent to which field lines wrap and coil around one another.<ref>{{cite book| last1=Cantarella | first1=Jason | last2=Deturck | first2=Dennis | last3=Gluck | first3=Herman | last4=Teytel | first4=Mikhail|chapter=Influence of geometry and topology on helicity[J]|url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/book/10.1029/GM111|title=Magnetic Helicity in Space and Laboratory Plasmas| series=Geophysical Monograph Series |year=1999|pages=17–24|doi=10.1029/GM111p0017| isbn=978-1-118-66447-6 }}</ref><ref name=":6" /> It is defined as the [[volume integral]] over <math>V</math> of the scalar product of <math>\mathbf f</math> and its [[Curl (mathematics)|curl]], <math>\nabla\times{\mathbf f}</math>: | ||
<math display="block"> H^{\mathbf f} = \int_V {\mathbf f} \cdot \left(\nabla\times{\mathbf f}\right)\ dV . </math> | |||
===Magnetic helicity=== | === Magnetic helicity === | ||
Magnetic helicity <math>H^{\mathbf M}</math> is the helicity of a [[magnetic vector potential]] <math>{\mathbf A}</math> where <math>\nabla \times {\mathbf A}={\mathbf B}</math> is the associated [[magnetic field]] confined to a volume <math>V</math>. Magnetic helicity can then be expressed as<ref name=":2" /> | Magnetic helicity <math>H^{\mathbf M}</math> is the helicity of a [[magnetic vector potential]] <math>{\mathbf A}</math> where <math>\nabla \times {\mathbf A}={\mathbf B}</math> is the associated [[magnetic field]] confined to a volume <math>V</math>. Magnetic helicity can then be expressed as<ref name=":2" /> | ||
<math display="block"> H^{\mathbf M} = \int_V {\mathbf A}\cdot{\mathbf B}\ dV . </math> | |||
Since the magnetic vector potential is not [[gauge invariant]], the magnetic helicity is also | Since the magnetic vector potential is not [[gauge invariance|gauge invariant]], the magnetic helicity is also gauge dependent in general. As a consequence, the magnetic helicity of a physical system cannot be measured directly. Under certain conditions, one can measure the current helicity of a system and, when further conditions are fulfilled, deduce the magnetic helicity.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Brandenburg|first1=Axel|last2=Subramanian|first2=Kandaswamy|title=Astrophysical magnetic fields and nonlinear dynamo theory|journal=Physics Reports|year=2005|volume=417|issue=1–4|pages=1–209|doi=10.1016/j.physrep.2005.06.005|arxiv=astro-ph/0405052|bibcode=2005PhR...417....1B|s2cid=119518712|issn=0370-1573}}</ref> | ||
Magnetic helicity has units of [[magnetic flux]] squared: Wb<sup>2</sup> ([[Weber (unit)|webers]] squared) in [[International System of Units|SI units]] and Mx<sup>2</sup> ([[Maxwell (unit)|maxwells]] squared) in [[Gaussian units|Gaussian | Magnetic helicity has units of [[magnetic flux]] squared: Wb<sup>2</sup> ([[Weber (unit)|webers]] squared) in [[International System of Units|SI units]] and Mx<sup>2</sup> ([[Maxwell (unit)|maxwells]] squared) in [[Gaussian units|Gaussian units]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Huba|first=J.D.|title=NRL Plasma Formulary|year=2013|url=http://www.nrl.navy.mil/ppd/sites/www.nrl.navy.mil.ppd/files/pdfs/NRL_FORMULARY_13.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190630224315/http://www.nrl.navy.mil/ppd/sites/www.nrl.navy.mil.ppd/files/pdfs/NRL_FORMULARY_13.pdf|archive-date=2019-06-30|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=Beam Physics Branch Plasma Physics Division Naval Research Laboratory}}</ref> | ||
===Current helicity=== | === Current helicity === | ||
The current helicity, or helicity <math> | The current helicity, or helicity <math>H^{\mathbf{J}}</math> of the magnetic field <math>\mathbf{B}</math> confined to a volume <math>V</math>, can be expressed as | ||
<math display="block"> H^{\mathbf J} = \int_V {\mathbf B}\cdot{\mathbf J}\ dV </math> | |||
where <math> {\mathbf J} = \nabla \times {\mathbf B} </math> is the [[current density]].<ref name=":3"> | where <math> {\mathbf J} = \nabla \times {\mathbf B} </math> is the [[current density]].<ref name=":3"> | ||
{{cite journal|last1=Subramanian|first1=K.|last2=Brandenburg|first2=A.|year=2006|title=Magnetic helicity density and its flux in weakly inhomogeneous turbulence|journal=[[The Astrophysical Journal Letters]]|volume=648|issue=1|pages=L71–L74|arxiv=astro-ph/0509392|bibcode=2006ApJ...648L..71S|doi=10.1086/507828|s2cid=323935}}</ref> Unlike magnetic helicity, current helicity is not an ideal invariant | {{cite journal|last1=Subramanian|first1=K.|last2=Brandenburg|first2=A.|year=2006|title=Magnetic helicity density and its flux in weakly inhomogeneous turbulence|journal=[[The Astrophysical Journal Letters]]|volume=648|issue=1|pages=L71–L74|arxiv=astro-ph/0509392|bibcode=2006ApJ...648L..71S|doi=10.1086/507828|s2cid=323935}}</ref> Unlike magnetic helicity, current helicity is not an ideal invariant. It is not conserved even when the [[Electrical resistivity and conductivity|electrical resistivity]] is zero. | ||
== Gauge considerations == | == Gauge considerations == | ||
Magnetic helicity is a gauge-dependent quantity, because <math>\mathbf A</math> can be redefined by adding a gradient to it | Magnetic helicity is a gauge-dependent quantity, because <math>\mathbf A</math> can be redefined by adding a gradient to it, a change of gauge. However, for perfectly conducting boundaries or periodic systems without a net magnetic flux, the magnetic helicity contained in the whole domain is gauge invariant,<ref name=":3" /> that is, independent of the gauge choice. A gauge-invariant relative helicity has been defined for volumes with nonzero magnetic flux on their boundary surfaces.<ref name=":0" /> | ||
== Topological interpretation == | == Topological interpretation == | ||
The | The term helicity reflects that the trajectory of a fluid particle in a fluid with velocity <math>\boldsymbol v</math> and [[vorticity]] <math>\boldsymbol{\omega}=\nabla \times \boldsymbol{v}</math> forms a [[helix]] in regions where the [[kinetic helicity]] <math>\textstyle H^K=\int \mathbf v \cdot \boldsymbol{\omega} dV \neq 0</math>. When <math>\textstyle H^K > 0</math>, the resulting helix is right-handed. When <math>\textstyle H^K < 0</math> it is left-handed. This behavior is closely analogous to that of magnetic field lines. | ||
Regions where magnetic helicity is not zero can also contain other sorts of magnetic structures, such as helical magnetic field lines. Magnetic helicity is a continuous generalization of the topological concept of [[linking number]] to the differential quantities required to describe the magnetic field.<ref name=":0" /> Where linking numbers describe how many times curves are interlinked, magnetic helicity describes how many magnetic field lines are interlinked.<ref name=":2" /> | Regions where magnetic helicity is not zero can also contain other sorts of magnetic structures, such as helical magnetic field lines. Magnetic helicity is a continuous generalization of the topological concept of [[linking number]] to the differential quantities required to describe the magnetic field.<ref name=":0" /> Where linking numbers describe how many times curves are interlinked, magnetic helicity describes how many magnetic field lines are interlinked.<ref name=":2" /> | ||
[[File:Circular DNA Supercoiling.png|thumb|Examples of curves with varying values of [[writhe]] and [[Twist (differential geometry)|twist]]. Magnetic helicity measures the sum of these two quantities for magnetic field lines. The sum is conserved under all transformations where curves are not cut or joined.]] | [[File:Circular DNA Supercoiling.png|thumb|Examples of curves with varying values of [[writhe]] and [[Twist (differential geometry)|twist]]. Magnetic helicity measures the sum of these two quantities for magnetic field lines. The sum is conserved under all transformations where curves are not cut or joined.]] | ||
Magnetic helicity is proportional to the sum of the [[Topology|topological]] quantities [[Twist (differential geometry)|twist]] and [[writhe]] for magnetic field lines. The twist is the rotation of the flux tube around its axis, and | Magnetic helicity is proportional to the sum of the [[Topology|topological]] quantities [[Twist (differential geometry)|twist]] and [[writhe]] for magnetic field lines. The twist is the rotation of the flux tube around its axis, and writhe is the rotation of the flux tube axis itself. Topological transformations can change twist and writhe individually, but conserve their sum. As [[magnetic flux tube]]s, collections of closed magnetic field line loops, tend to avoid crossing in magnetohydrodynamic fluids, magnetic helicity is well conserved. | ||
Magnetic helicity is closely related to [[Hydrodynamical helicity|fluid mechanical helicity]], the corresponding quantity for fluid flow lines, and their dynamics are interlinked.<ref name=":1" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Linkmann|first1=Moritz|last2=Sahoo|first2=Ganapati|last3=McKay|first3=Mairi|last4=Berera|first4=Arjun|last5=Biferale|first5=Luca|date=2017-02-06|title=Effects of Magnetic and Kinetic Helicities on the Growth of Magnetic Fields in Laminar and Turbulent Flows by Helical Fourier Decomposition|journal=The Astrophysical Journal|volume=836|issue=1|page=26|arxiv=1609.01781|doi=10.3847/1538-4357/836/1/26|bibcode=2017ApJ...836...26L|s2cid=53126623|issn=1538-4357 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
== Properties == | == Properties == | ||
=== Ideal quadratic invariance === | === Ideal quadratic invariance === | ||
In the late 1950s, [[Lodewijk Woltjer]] and [[Walter M. Elsasser|Walter M. Elsässer]] discovered independently the [[Conservation law|ideal invariance]] of magnetic helicity,<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Woltjer|first=L.|title=A Theorem on Force-Free Magnetic Fields|date=1958-06-01|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=44|issue=6|pages=489–491|doi=10.1073/pnas.44.6.489|pmid=16590226|pmc=528606|bibcode=1958PNAS...44..489W|issn=0027-8424|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Elsasser|first=Walter M.|date=1956-04-01|title=Hydromagnetic Dynamo Theory | In the late 1950s, [[Lodewijk Woltjer]] and [[Walter M. Elsasser|Walter M. Elsässer]] discovered independently the [[Conservation law|ideal invariance]] of magnetic helicity,<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Woltjer|first=L.|title=A Theorem on Force-Free Magnetic Fields|date=1958-06-01|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=44|issue=6|pages=489–491|doi=10.1073/pnas.44.6.489|pmid=16590226|pmc=528606|bibcode=1958PNAS...44..489W|issn=0027-8424|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last=Elsasser|first=Walter M.|date=1956-04-01|title=Hydromagnetic Dynamo Theory|journal=Reviews of Modern Physics|volume=28|issue=2|pages=135–163|doi=10.1103/revmodphys.28.135|bibcode=1956RvMP...28..135E|issn=0034-6861}}</ref> that is, its conservation when resistivity is zero. The following outlines Woltjer's proof for a closed system. | ||
In [[ideal magnetohydrodynamics]], the time evolution of a magnetic field and magnetic vector potential can be expressed using the [[induction equation]] as | In [[ideal magnetohydrodynamics]], the time evolution of a magnetic field and magnetic vector potential can be expressed using the [[induction equation]] as | ||
<math display="block"> \frac{\partial {\mathbf B}}{\partial t} = \nabla \times ({\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B}),\quad \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t} = {\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B} + \nabla\Phi, </math> | |||
respectively, where <math> \nabla\Phi </math> is a [[scalar potential]] given by the [[Gauge | respectively, where <math> \nabla\Phi </math> is a [[scalar potential]] given by the gauge condition, see [[#Gauge considerations|Gauge considerations]]. Choosing the gauge so that the scalar potential vanishes, <math>\nabla \Phi = \mathbf{0}</math>, the time evolution of magnetic helicity in a volume <math>V</math> is given by: | ||
<math display="block">\begin{align} | |||
\frac{\partial H^{\mathbf M}}{\partial t} &= \int_V \left( \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t} \cdot {\mathbf B} + {\mathbf A} \cdot \frac{\partial {\mathbf B}}{\partial t} \right) dV \\ | \frac{\partial H^{\mathbf M}}{\partial t} &= \int_V \left( \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t} \cdot {\mathbf B} + {\mathbf A} \cdot \frac{\partial {\mathbf B}}{\partial t} \right) dV \\ | ||
&= \int_V ({\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B}) \cdot{\mathbf B}\ dV + \int_V {\mathbf A} \cdot \left(\nabla \times \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t}\right) dV . | &= \int_V ({\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B}) \cdot{\mathbf B}\ dV + \int_V {\mathbf A} \cdot \left(\nabla \times \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t}\right) dV . | ||
\end{align}</math> | \end{align}</math> | ||
The [[dot product]] in the integrand of the first term is zero since <math>{\mathbf B}</math> is orthogonal to the cross product <math>{\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B}</math> | The [[dot product]] in the integrand of the first term is zero since <math>{\mathbf B}</math> is orthogonal to the cross product <math>{\mathbf v} \times {\mathbf B}</math>. The second term can be integrated by parts to give | ||
<math display="block"> \frac{\partial H^{\mathbf M}}{\partial t} = \int_V \left(\nabla \times {\mathbf A}\right) \cdot \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t}\ dV + \int_{\partial V} \left({\mathbf A} \times \frac{\partial {\mathbf A}}{\partial t}\right) \cdot d\mathbf{S} </math> | |||
where the second term is a surface integral over the boundary surface <math>\partial V</math> of the closed system. The dot product in the integrand of the first term is zero because <math> \nabla \times {\mathbf A} = {\mathbf B} </math> is orthogonal to <math> \partial {\mathbf A}/\partial t .</math> The second term also vanishes because motions inside the closed system | where the second term is a surface integral over the boundary surface <math>\partial V</math> of the closed system. The dot product in the integrand of the first term is zero because <math> \nabla \times {\mathbf A} = {\mathbf B} </math> is orthogonal to <math> \partial {\mathbf A}/\partial t .</math> The second term also vanishes because motions inside the closed system do not affect the vector potential outside, so that at the boundary surface <math> \partial {\mathbf A}/\partial t = \mathbf{0} </math> since the magnetic vector potential is a continuous function. Therefore, | ||
<math display="block"> \frac{\partial H^{\mathbf M}}{\partial t} = 0 , </math> | |||
and magnetic helicity is ideally conserved. In all situations where magnetic helicity is gauge invariant, magnetic helicity is ideally conserved without the need for the specific gauge choice <math> \nabla \Phi = \mathbf{0} . </math> | and magnetic helicity is ideally conserved. In all situations where magnetic helicity is gauge invariant, magnetic helicity is ideally conserved without the need for the specific gauge choice <math> \nabla \Phi = \mathbf{0} . </math> | ||
Magnetic helicity remains conserved | Magnetic helicity remains conserved to a good approximation even with small but finite resistivity. In that case [[magnetic reconnection]] dissipates [[energy]].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2" /> | ||
=== Inverse transfer === | === Inverse transfer === | ||
Small-scale helical structures tend to form larger magnetic structures. This is called inverse transfer in Fourier space, as opposed to the direct [[energy cascade]] in three-dimensional turbulent hydrodynamical flows. The possibility of such an inverse transfer was first proposed by [[Uriel Frisch]] and collaborators<ref name=":1" /> and has been verified through many numerical experiments.<ref>{{Cite journal| last1=Pouquet|first1=A.| last2=Frisch|first2=U.| last3=Léorat|first3=J.| date=1976-09-24| title=Strong MHD helical turbulence and the nonlinear dynamo effect| journal=Journal of Fluid Mechanics| volume=77| issue=2| pages=321–354| doi=10.1017/s0022112076002140| bibcode=1976JFM....77..321P| s2cid=3746018 |issn=0022-1120}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last1=Meneguzzi|first1=M.| last2=Frisch|first2=U.| last3=Pouquet|first3=A.| date=1981-10-12| title=Helical and Nonhelical Turbulent Dynamos| journal=Physical Review Letters| volume=47| issue=15| pages=1060–1064| doi=10.1103/physrevlett.47.1060| bibcode=1981PhRvL..47.1060M| issn=0031-9007}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last1=Balsara|first1=D.| last2=Pouquet|first2=A.| date=January 1999| title=The formation of large-scale structures in supersonic magnetohydrodynamic flows| journal=Physics of Plasmas| volume=6| issue=1| pages=89–99| doi=10.1063/1.873263| bibcode=1999PhPl....6...89B| issn=1070-664X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last1=Christensson|first1=Mattias| last2=Hindmarsh|first2=Mark| last3=Brandenburg|first3=Axel| date=2001-10-22| title=Inverse cascade in decaying three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence | journal=Physical Review E | volume=64 | issue=5 | article-number=056405| doi=10.1103/physreve.64.056405 |pmid=11736099 |arxiv=astro-ph/0011321 | bibcode=2001PhRvE..64e6405C| s2cid=8309837| issn=1063-651X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last=Brandenburg|first=Axel| date=April 2001| title=The Inverse Cascade and Nonlinear Alpha-Effect in Simulations of Isotropic Helical Hydromagnetic Turbulence| journal=The Astrophysical Journal| volume=550| issue=2| pages=824–840| doi=10.1086/319783| arxiv=astro-ph/0006186| bibcode=2001ApJ...550..824B| issn=0004-637X| doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last1=Alexakis|first1=Alexandros| last2=Mininni|first2=Pablo D.| last3=Pouquet|first3=Annick| date=2006-03-20| title=On the Inverse Cascade of Magnetic Helicity|journal=The Astrophysical Journal| volume=640| issue=1| pages=335–343| doi=10.1086/500082| arxiv=physics/0509069| bibcode=2006ApJ...640..335A| issn=0004-637X| doi-access=free}}</ref> As a consequence, the presence of magnetic helicity is a candidate explanation for the existence and sustainment of large-scale magnetic structures in the Universe. | |||
The following argument for inverse transfer follows Frisch et al.<ref name=":1" /> It is based on the "realizability condition" for the magnetic helicity Fourier spectrum <math> \hat{H}^M_{\mathbf k} = \hat{\mathbf A}^*_{\mathbf k} \cdot \hat{\mathbf B}_{\mathbf k} </math> where <math> \hat{\mathbf B}_{\mathbf k} </math> is the Fourier coefficient at the [[Wave vector|wavevector]] <math> {\mathbf k} </math> of the magnetic field <math> {\mathbf B} </math>, and similarly for <math> \hat{\mathbf A} </math>, the star denoting the [[complex conjugate]]. The realizability condition is an application of the [[Cauchy–Schwarz inequality|Cauchy–Schwarz inequality]] and yields | |||
<math display="block"> \left|\hat{H}^M_{\mathbf k}\right| \leq \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf k}}{|{\mathbf k}|} ,</math> | <math display="block"> \left|\hat{H}^M_{\mathbf k}\right| \leq \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf k}}{|{\mathbf k}|} ,</math> | ||
with <math display="inline"> E^M_{\mathbf k} = \frac{1}{2} \hat{\mathbf B}^*_{\mathbf k}\cdot\hat{\mathbf B}_{\mathbf k} </math> the magnetic energy spectrum. To obtain this inequality, the | with <math display="inline"> E^M_{\mathbf k} = \frac{1}{2} \hat{\mathbf B}^*_{\mathbf k}\cdot\hat{\mathbf B}_{\mathbf k} </math> the magnetic energy spectrum. To obtain this inequality, use the relation <math> |\hat{\mathbf B}_{\mathbf k}|=|{\mathbf k}||\hat{\mathbf A}^\perp_{\mathbf k}| </math>, with <math> \hat{\mathbf A}^\perp_{\mathbf k} </math> the [[Solenoidal vector field|solenoidal]] part of the Fourier transformed magnetic vector potential orthogonal to the wavevector, since <math> \hat{\mathbf{B}}_{\mathbf k} = i {\mathbf k} \times \hat{\mathbf{A}}_{\mathbf k} </math>. The factor 2 is not present in Frisch et al.<ref name=":1" /> because magnetic helicity is defined there as <math display="inline"> \frac{1}{2} \int_V {\mathbf A} \cdot {\mathbf B}\ dV </math>. | ||
Consider an initial state with no velocity field and a magnetic field present only at two wavevectors <math> \mathbf p </math> and <math> \mathbf q </math>. Assume a fully helical magnetic field that saturates the realizability condition, <math> \left|\hat{H}^M_{\mathbf p}\right| = \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf p}}{|{\mathbf p}|} </math> and <math> \left|\hat{H}^M_{\mathbf q}\right| = \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf q}}{|{\mathbf q}|} </math>. If all the energy and magnetic helicity transfer to another wavevector <math> \mathbf k </math>, conservation of magnetic helicity and of the total energy <math> E^T = E^M + E^K </math>, the sum of magnetic and kinetic energy, gives | |||
<math display="block"> H^M_{\mathbf k} = H^M_{\mathbf p} + H^M_{\mathbf q}, </math> | <math display="block"> H^M_{\mathbf k} = H^M_{\mathbf p} + H^M_{\mathbf q}, </math> | ||
<math display="block"> E^T_{\mathbf k} = E^T_{\mathbf p}+E^T_{\mathbf q} = E^M_{\mathbf p}+E^M_{\mathbf q}. </math> | <math display="block"> E^T_{\mathbf k} = E^T_{\mathbf p}+E^T_{\mathbf q} = E^M_{\mathbf p}+E^M_{\mathbf q}. </math> | ||
Because the initial state has no kinetic energy, it follows that <math> |\mathbf k| \leq \max(|\mathbf p|, |\mathbf q| ) </math>. If instead <math> |\mathbf k| > \max(|\mathbf p|,|\mathbf q| ) </math>, then | |||
<math display="block"> H^M_{\mathbf k} = H^M_{\mathbf p} + H^M_{\mathbf q} = \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf p}}{|\mathbf p|} + \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf q}}{|\mathbf q|} > \frac{2\left(E^M_{\mathbf p} + E^M_{\mathbf q}\right)}{|\mathbf k|} = \frac{2E^T_{\mathbf k}}{|\mathbf k|} \geq \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf k}}{|\mathbf k|}, </math> | <math display="block"> H^M_{\mathbf k} = H^M_{\mathbf p} + H^M_{\mathbf q} = \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf p}}{|\mathbf p|} + \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf q}}{|\mathbf q|} > \frac{2\left(E^M_{\mathbf p} + E^M_{\mathbf q}\right)}{|\mathbf k|} = \frac{2E^T_{\mathbf k}}{|\mathbf k|} \geq \frac{2E^M_{\mathbf k}}{|\mathbf k|}, </math> | ||
which would violate the realizability condition. Therefore <math> |\mathbf k| \leq \max(|\mathbf p|,|\mathbf q| ) </math>. In particular, for <math> |{\mathbf p}| = |{\mathbf q}| </math>, the magnetic helicity is transferred to a smaller wavevector, which corresponds to larger spatial scales. | |||
which would | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Woltjer's theorem]] | * [[Woltjer's theorem]] | ||
| Line 87: | Line 102: | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
* A. A. Pevtsov's [https://gonewithsolarwind.com/index.php/helical-gallery Helicity] Page | * A. A. Pevtsov's [https://gonewithsolarwind.com/index.php/helical-gallery Helicity] Page | ||
* Mitch Berger's [http://emps.exeter.ac.uk/mathematics/staff/mab215/publications Publications] Page | * Mitch Berger's [http://emps.exeter.ac.uk/mathematics/staff/mab215/publications Publications] Page | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:electromagnetic quantities]] | ||
[[Category:Plasma parameters]] | [[Category:Plasma parameters]] | ||
[[Category:Astrophysics]] | [[Category:Astrophysics]] | ||
Latest revision as of 04:13, 17 November 2025
Template:Short description Template:Infobox unit
In plasma physics, magnetic helicity is a measure of the linkage, twist, and writhe of a magnetic field.[1][2]
Magnetic helicity is used to analyze systems with very low resistivity, including many astrophysical environments. When resistivity is low, magnetic helicity is approximately conserved over long timescales. Magnetic helicity dynamics are important in studies of solar flares and coronal mass ejections.[3] It is relevant in the dynamics of the solar wind.[4] Its approximate conservation is significant in dynamo processes. It also plays a role in fusion research, including reversed field pinch experiments.[5][6][7][8][9]
When a magnetic field contains magnetic helicity, it can drive the formation of large-scale structures from small-scale ones.[10] This process is referred to as inverse transfer in Fourier space. In three dimensions, magnetic helicity supports growth toward larger scales. In contrast, many three-dimensional flows in ordinary fluid mechanics are turbulent and exhibit a direct cascade in which large-scale vortices break up into smaller ones that dissipate through viscous effects. By a parallel but inverted process, small helical magnetic structures with nonzero magnetic helicity combine to form large-scale magnetic fields. This behavior is observed in the dynamics of the heliospheric current sheet,[11] a large magnetic structure in the Solar System.
History
The concept of helicity emerged in the mid-20th century within fluid dynamics, where British fluid dynamicist H. K. Moffatt connected the knottedness of vortex lines to a conserved integral he termed helicity.[12] In magnetohydrodynamics, Dutch-American astrophysicist Lodewijk Woltjer proved that magnetic helicity is an ideal invariant and characterized minimum energy states at fixed helicity. German-American geophysicist Walter M. Elsasser's dynamo work provided an early theoretical foundation for such invariants in cosmic magnetism.[13][14]
During the 1970s and 1980s, the concept was further developed through advances in turbulence theory, laboratory plasma experiments, and topology. Uriel Frisch and collaborators predicted an inverse transfer of magnetic helicity toward larger scales, which was later confirmed numerically and interpreted as a pathway to self-organization in magnetized turbulence.[15] American plasma physicist J. B. Taylor introduced relaxation theory for confined plasmas, arguing that low resistivity allows rapid relaxation to a force-free state that preserves helicity. He emphasized that during relaxation "only total magnetic helicity survives."[16][17] On the topological front, American mathematician Mitchell A. Berger and American astrophysicist George B. Field introduced relative magnetic helicity to extend the invariant to volumes with magnetic flux crossing their boundaries. American plasma physicists John M. Finn and Thomas M. Antonsen Jr. provided an equivalent gauge-invariant expression, describing a "general gauge invariant definition."[18][19]
From the 1990s onward, magnetic helicity became an important observational and diagnostic tool in solar physics and space physics. German solar physicist Norbert Seehafer reported that current helicity in active regions is "predominantly negative in the northern" and "positive in the southern hemisphere," establishing an empirical hemispheric rule that motivated extensive follow-up research.[20] American solar physicists Alexei A. Pevtsov, Richard C. Canfield, and Thomas R. Metcalf mapped helicity patterns in active regions and demonstrated its latitudinal variation, helping to connect photospheric measurements to coronal dynamics and ejections.[21][22] Analyses of the solar wind and heliosphere used helicity to interpret large-scale magnetic structure and transport.[23]
Scientists have debated how best to define and measure helicity in realistic, open systems and how to interpret local proxies. Relative magnetic helicity is now the standard approach for volumes with flux crossing the boundary, while current helicity and other proxies are used when full three-dimensional measurements are unavailable.[18][19][24] Ongoing discussions address gauge issues and whether a meaningful local helicity density can be defined in weakly inhomogeneous turbulence, leading to proposed gauge-invariant local measures and improved numerical diagnostics.[25] In dynamo theory, magnetic helicity conservation constrains the growth of large-scale fields. Research on helicity fluxes and open boundaries suggests that such fluxes can relax these constraints, a perspective developed in astrophysical dynamo modeling.[26][27][28]
Mathematical definition
Generally, the helicity of a smooth vector field confined to a volume is a measure of the extent to which field lines wrap and coil around one another.[29][2] It is defined as the volume integral over of the scalar product of and its curl, :
Magnetic helicity
Magnetic helicity is the helicity of a magnetic vector potential where is the associated magnetic field confined to a volume . Magnetic helicity can then be expressed as[5]
Since the magnetic vector potential is not gauge invariant, the magnetic helicity is also gauge dependent in general. As a consequence, the magnetic helicity of a physical system cannot be measured directly. Under certain conditions, one can measure the current helicity of a system and, when further conditions are fulfilled, deduce the magnetic helicity.[30]
Magnetic helicity has units of magnetic flux squared: Wb2 (webers squared) in SI units and Mx2 (maxwells squared) in Gaussian units.[31]
Current helicity
The current helicity, or helicity of the magnetic field confined to a volume , can be expressed as where is the current density.[32] Unlike magnetic helicity, current helicity is not an ideal invariant. It is not conserved even when the electrical resistivity is zero.
Gauge considerations
Magnetic helicity is a gauge-dependent quantity, because can be redefined by adding a gradient to it, a change of gauge. However, for perfectly conducting boundaries or periodic systems without a net magnetic flux, the magnetic helicity contained in the whole domain is gauge invariant,[32] that is, independent of the gauge choice. A gauge-invariant relative helicity has been defined for volumes with nonzero magnetic flux on their boundary surfaces.[11]
Topological interpretation
The term helicity reflects that the trajectory of a fluid particle in a fluid with velocity and vorticity forms a helix in regions where the kinetic helicity . When , the resulting helix is right-handed. When it is left-handed. This behavior is closely analogous to that of magnetic field lines.
Regions where magnetic helicity is not zero can also contain other sorts of magnetic structures, such as helical magnetic field lines. Magnetic helicity is a continuous generalization of the topological concept of linking number to the differential quantities required to describe the magnetic field.[11] Where linking numbers describe how many times curves are interlinked, magnetic helicity describes how many magnetic field lines are interlinked.[5]
Magnetic helicity is proportional to the sum of the topological quantities twist and writhe for magnetic field lines. The twist is the rotation of the flux tube around its axis, and writhe is the rotation of the flux tube axis itself. Topological transformations can change twist and writhe individually, but conserve their sum. As magnetic flux tubes, collections of closed magnetic field line loops, tend to avoid crossing in magnetohydrodynamic fluids, magnetic helicity is well conserved.
Magnetic helicity is closely related to fluid mechanical helicity, the corresponding quantity for fluid flow lines, and their dynamics are interlinked.[10][33]
Properties
Ideal quadratic invariance
In the late 1950s, Lodewijk Woltjer and Walter M. Elsässer discovered independently the ideal invariance of magnetic helicity,[34][35] that is, its conservation when resistivity is zero. The following outlines Woltjer's proof for a closed system.
In ideal magnetohydrodynamics, the time evolution of a magnetic field and magnetic vector potential can be expressed using the induction equation as respectively, where is a scalar potential given by the gauge condition, see Gauge considerations. Choosing the gauge so that the scalar potential vanishes, , the time evolution of magnetic helicity in a volume is given by: The dot product in the integrand of the first term is zero since is orthogonal to the cross product . The second term can be integrated by parts to give where the second term is a surface integral over the boundary surface of the closed system. The dot product in the integrand of the first term is zero because is orthogonal to The second term also vanishes because motions inside the closed system do not affect the vector potential outside, so that at the boundary surface since the magnetic vector potential is a continuous function. Therefore, and magnetic helicity is ideally conserved. In all situations where magnetic helicity is gauge invariant, magnetic helicity is ideally conserved without the need for the specific gauge choice
Magnetic helicity remains conserved to a good approximation even with small but finite resistivity. In that case magnetic reconnection dissipates energy.[11][5]
Inverse transfer
Small-scale helical structures tend to form larger magnetic structures. This is called inverse transfer in Fourier space, as opposed to the direct energy cascade in three-dimensional turbulent hydrodynamical flows. The possibility of such an inverse transfer was first proposed by Uriel Frisch and collaborators[10] and has been verified through many numerical experiments.[36][37][38][39][40][41] As a consequence, the presence of magnetic helicity is a candidate explanation for the existence and sustainment of large-scale magnetic structures in the Universe.
The following argument for inverse transfer follows Frisch et al.[10] It is based on the "realizability condition" for the magnetic helicity Fourier spectrum where is the Fourier coefficient at the wavevector of the magnetic field , and similarly for , the star denoting the complex conjugate. The realizability condition is an application of the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality and yields with the magnetic energy spectrum. To obtain this inequality, use the relation , with the solenoidal part of the Fourier transformed magnetic vector potential orthogonal to the wavevector, since . The factor 2 is not present in Frisch et al.[10] because magnetic helicity is defined there as .
Consider an initial state with no velocity field and a magnetic field present only at two wavevectors and . Assume a fully helical magnetic field that saturates the realizability condition, and . If all the energy and magnetic helicity transfer to another wavevector , conservation of magnetic helicity and of the total energy , the sum of magnetic and kinetic energy, gives
Because the initial state has no kinetic energy, it follows that . If instead , then which would violate the realizability condition. Therefore . In particular, for , the magnetic helicity is transferred to a smaller wavevector, which corresponds to larger spatial scales.
See also
References
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External links
- A. A. Pevtsov's Helicity Page
- Mitch Berger's Publications Page