Abstract

Quasistatic magnetoconvection of a fluid with low Prandtl number ( ${\textit {Pr}}=0.025$ ) with a vertical magnetic field is considered in a unit-aspect-ratio box with no-slip boundaries. At high relative magnetic field strengths, given by the Hartmann number ${\textit {Ha}}$ , the onset of convection is known to result from a sidewall instability giving rise to the wall-mode regime. Here, we carry out three-dimensional direct numerical simulations of unprecedented length to map out the parameter space at ${\textit {Ha}} = 200, 500, 1000$ , varying the Rayleigh number ( ${\textit {Ra}}$ ) over the range $6\times 10^5 \lesssim {\textit {Ra}} \lesssim 5\times 10^8$ . We track the development of stable equilibria produced by this primary instability, identifying bifurcations leading to limit cycles and eventually to chaotic dynamics. At ${\textit {Ha}}=200$ , the steady wall-mode solution undergoes a symmetry-breaking bifurcation producing a state that features a coexistence between wall modes and a large-scale roll in the centre of the domain, which persists to higher ${\textit {Ra}}$ . However, under a stronger magnetic field at ${\textit {Ha}}=1000$ , the steady wall-mode solution undergoes a Hopf bifurcation producing a limit cycle which further develops to solutions that shadow an orbit homoclinic to a saddle point. Upon a further increase in ${\textit {Ra}}$ , the system undergoes a subsequent symmetry break producing a coexistence between wall modes and a large-scale roll, although the large-scale roll exists only for a small range of ${\textit {Ra}}$ , and chaotic dynamics primarily arise from a mixture of chaotic wall-mode dynamics and arrays of cellular structures.

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