Magnetic helicity
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In plasma physics, magnetic helicity quantifies the extent to which a magnetic field "wraps around itself". It is a generalization of the topological concept of linking number
to the differential quantities required to describe the magnetic field.
As with many quantities in electromagnetism, magnetic helicity (which
describes magnetic field lines) is closely related to fluid mechanical
helicity (which describes fluid flow lines).
If magnetic field lines follow the strands of a twisted rope, this configuration would have nonzero magnetic helicity; left-handed ropes would have negative values and right-handed ropes would have positive values.[clarification needed]
Formally,
If magnetic field lines follow the strands of a twisted rope, this configuration would have nonzero magnetic helicity; left-handed ropes would have negative values and right-handed ropes would have positive values.[clarification needed]
Formally,
- is the magnetic field strength
- ;
- is the vector potential of
References
- Subramanian, K.; Brandenburg, A. (2006). "Magnetic helicity density and its flux in weakly inhomogeneous turbulence". The Astrophysical Journal Letters 648: L71–L74. arXiv:astro-ph/0509392. Bibcode:2006ApJ...648L..71S. doi:10.1086/507828.
External links
- A. A. Pevtsov's Helicity on the Web Page
- Mitch Berger's Publications Page
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