Abstract
Motivated by recent simulations of sunspot formation, we extend the theory of the pressure difference between magnetized and nonmagnetized gas by Dicke to include rotating turbulence. While the (vertical) background field provides a positive‐definite magnetic pressure difference between the magnetized and the unmagnetized gas, Reynolds stress and Maxwell stress of turbulence strongly modify this result. With the quasilinear approximation, we demonstrate that the influence of the turbulence differs between the high‐conductivity and the low‐conductivity limits. Sufficiently small magnetic Reynolds numbers lead to magnetic pressure suppression, where indeed the pressure excess can even assume negative values. Box simulations of magnetoconvection subject to a vertical magnetic field carried out with the Nirvana code confirm this overall picture. They also demonstrate how a global rotation reduces the negative magnetic pressure effect. For rapid rotation, the total magnetic pressure difference caused by large‐scale magnetic fields and turbulence even fully disappears for small field strengths. Magnetic fields of moderate strength thus neither reduce nor enhance the turbulence pressure of rapidly rotating convection. Consequences of this phenomenon for star‐formation efficiency are briefly discussed.
Submitted Version (
Free)
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have