Small-scale structure of the geodynamo inferred from Oersted and Magsat satellite data
Gauthier Hulot (),
Céline Eymin,
Benoît Langlais,
Mioara Mandea and
Nils Olsen
Additional contact information
Gauthier Hulot: Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
Céline Eymin: Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
Benoît Langlais: Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
Mioara Mandea: Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
Nils Olsen: Danish Space Research Institute
Nature, 2002, vol. 416, issue 6881, 620-623
Abstract:
Abstract The ‘geodynamo’ in the Earth's liquid outer core produces a magnetic field that dominates the large and medium length scales of the magnetic field observed at the Earth's surface1,2. Here we use data from the currently operating Danish Oersted3 satellite, and from the US Magsat2 satellite that operated in 1979/80, to identify and interpret variations in the magnetic field over the past 20 years, down to length scales previously inaccessible. Projected down to the surface of the Earth's core, we found these variations to be small below the Pacific Ocean, and large at polar latitudes and in a region centred below southern Africa. The flow pattern at the surface of the core that we calculate to account for these changes is characterized by a westward flow concentrated in retrograde polar vortices and an asymmetric ring where prograde vortices are correlated with highs (and retrograde vortices with lows) in the historical (400-year average) magnetic field4,5. This pattern is analogous to those seen in a large class of numerical dynamo simulations6, except for its longitudinal asymmetry. If this asymmetric state was reached often in the past, it might account for several persistent patterns observed in the palaeomagnetic field7,8,9,10. We postulate that it might also be a state in which the geodynamo operates before reversing.
Date: 2002
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DOI: 10.1038/416620a
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