2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-246x.2005.02613.x
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Statistical palaeomagnetic field modelling and dynamo numerical simulation

Abstract: International audienceBy relying on two numerical dynamo simulations for which such investigations are possible, we test the validity and sensitivity of a statistical palaeomagnetic field modelling approach known as the giant gaussian process (GGP) modelling approach. This approach is currently used to analyse palaeomagnetic data at times of stable polarity and infer some information about the way the main magnetic field (MF) of the Earth has been behaving in the past and has possibly been influenced by core–m… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Both numerical models fail to predict an axial quadrupole as strong as that inferred from inclination anomalies. On the time-average, the equatorial symmetry of numerical dynamos is not broken in models with homogeneous boundary conditions (Olson and Christensen 2002), though Bouligand et al (2005) report a statistically significant quadrupole component present in a time average of the Glatzmaier and Roberts (1995) dynamo model. Olson and Christensen (2002) further showed that the axial quadrupole component is crucially sensitive to the amount of equatorial asymmetry present in the imposed heterogeneous heat flow condition.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Both numerical models fail to predict an axial quadrupole as strong as that inferred from inclination anomalies. On the time-average, the equatorial symmetry of numerical dynamos is not broken in models with homogeneous boundary conditions (Olson and Christensen 2002), though Bouligand et al (2005) report a statistically significant quadrupole component present in a time average of the Glatzmaier and Roberts (1995) dynamo model. Olson and Christensen (2002) further showed that the axial quadrupole component is crucially sensitive to the amount of equatorial asymmetry present in the imposed heterogeneous heat flow condition.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…In our simplified spin model the dynamic equations only concern the relative angles of the spins to the rotation axis while a typical numerical dynamo deals with magnetic field, velocity, pressure and temperature. Based on the close analysis of numerical simulations [4,5,13,17,20,[34][35][36][37][38][39][40], see Fig. 9 as an example, we may nevertheless build some analogies, in particular concerning the reversal behavior.…”
Section: Comparison With Numerical Dynamo Simulationsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Any extrapolation to high degree is limited by the magnetic dissipation scale, from which the spectrum is expected to rapidly decay. The spherical harmonic degree corresponding to the magnetic dissipation scale is estimated to be about 150 (Christensen and Tilgner, 2004;Buffett and Christensen, 2007;Finlay and Amit, 2011). This is much larger than the typical truncation degree of core field models and will be ignored in the following.…”
Section: Analytical Expressions Of the Geomagnetic Spatial Power Specmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Time-average paleomagnetic field and paleo secular variation modeling strategies rely on a GGP description (for a review see Hulot et al, 2010). In addition, it was shown that GGP describes well the field produced by numerical dynamo models (e.g., Bouligand et al, 2005). Following this rationale, it is therefore expected that some part of the spectrum will be flat immediately above the magnetic field sources (Backus et al, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%