Abstract

We study the evolution of phase-transition-generated cosmic magnetic fields coupled to the primeval cosmic plasma in turbulent and viscous free-streaming regimes. The evolution laws for the magnetic energy density and correlation length, both in helical and non-helical cases, are found by solving the autoinduction and Navier-Stokes equations in mean-field approximation. Analytical results are derived in Minkowski spacetime and then extended to the case of a Friedmann universe with zero spatial curvature, both in radiation and matter dominated eras. The three possible viscous free-streaming phases are characterized by a drag term in the Navier-Stokes equation which depends on the free-streaming properties of neutrinos, photons, or hydrogen atoms, respectively. In the case of non-helical magnetic fields, the magnetic intensity $B$ and the magnetic correlation length $\xi_B$ evolve asymptotically with the temperature $T$ as $B(T) \simeq \kappa_B (N_i v_i)^{\varrho_1} (T/T_i)^{\varrho_2}$ and $\xi_B(T) \simeq \kappa_\xi (N_i v_i)^{\varrho_3} (T/T_i)^{\varrho_4}$. Here, $T_i$, $N_i$, and $v_i$ are, respectively, the temperature, the number of magnetic domains per horizon length, and the bulk velocity at the onset of the particular regime. The coefficients $\kappa_B$, $\kappa_\xi$, $\varrho_1$, $\varrho_2$, $\varrho_3$, and $\varrho_4$, depend on the index of the assumed initial power-law magnetic spectrum, $p$, and on the particular regime, with the order-one constants $\kappa_B$ and $\kappa_\xi$ depending also on the cut-off adopted for the initial magnetic spectrum. In the helical case, the quasi-conservation of the magnetic helicity implies, apart from logarithmic corrections and a factor proportional to the initial fractional helicity, power-like evolution laws equal to those in the non-helical case, but with $p$ equal to zero.

Highlights

  • Magnetic fields generated during large-scale structure formation through astrophysical processes usually have large correlation scales but low intensities

  • Astrophysical mechanisms cannot explain the presence of largescale magnetic fields recently detected in cosmic voids [83,84,85,86]

  • It is worth noting that the power-law behavior for the initial magnetic spectrum is predicted by many models of generation of cosmic magnetic fields in the early universe

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Magnetic fields generated during large-scale structure formation through astrophysical processes usually have large correlation scales but low intensities. The precondition to explaining the observed fields is an amplification of these seeds. Dynamo mechanisms operating in gravitationally bound large-scale structures (such as galaxies and clusters of galaxies) could substantially increase the intensity of such fields up to observed values (for reviews on dynamo mechanisms see, e.g., [81,82]). Astrophysical mechanisms cannot explain the presence of largescale magnetic fields recently detected in cosmic voids [83,84,85,86].

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call