MRI-driven $α-Ω$ dynamos in protoneutron stars [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2111.02148


Magnetars are highly magnetized neutron stars that can produce X-ray and soft gamma-ray emissions and that have a dipole of $10^{14}$ G to $10^{15}$ G. A promising mechanism to explain magnetar formation is magnetic field amplification by the MRI in fast-rotating protoneutron stars (PNS). This scenario is supported by recent global models showing that small-scale turbulence can generate a dipole with magnetar-like intensity. However, the impact of buoyancy and density stratification on the efficiency of the MRI at generating a dipole is still unknown. We assess the impact of the density and entropy profiles on the MRI dynamo in a global model of a fast-rotating PNS, which focuses on its outer stratified region stable to convection. Using the pseudo-spectral code MagIC, we perform three-dimensional Boussinesq and anelastic MHD simulations in spherical geometry with explicit diffusivities. We perform a parameter study in which we investigate the effect of different approximations and of thermal diffusion. We obtain a self-sustained turbulent MRI-driven dynamo, which confirms most of our previous incompressible results once rescaled for density. The MRI also generates a non-dominant equatorial dipole, which represents about 4.3% of the averaged magnetic field strength. Interestingly, in the presence of a density gradient, an axisymmetric magnetic field at large scales oscillates with time, which can be described as a mean-field $\alpha-\Omega$ dynamo. Buoyancy damps turbulence in the equatorial plane but it has overall a relatively weak influence with a realistic high thermal diffusion. Our results support the ability of the MRI to generate magnetar-like large-scale magnetic fields. They furthermore predict the presence of an $\alpha-\Omega$ dynamo in the protoneutron star, which could be important to model in-situ magnetic field amplification in core-collapse supernovae. [abridged]

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Reboul-Salze, J. Guilet, R. Raynaud, et. al.
Thu, 4 Nov 21
35/73

Comments: Submitted to A&A, 20 pages, 19 figures