Spacecraft data reveal a very Earth-like Jovian magnetic field. This is surprising since numerical simulations have shown that the vastly different interiors of terrestrial and gas planets can strongly affect the internal dynamo process. Here we present the first numerical dynamo that manages to match the structure and strength of the observed magnetic field by embracing the newest models for Jupiter's interior. Simulated dynamo action primarily occurs in the deep high electrical conductivity region, while zonal flows are dynamically constrained to a strong equatorial jet in the outer envelope of low conductivity. Our model reproduces the structure and strength of the observed global magnetic field and predicts that secondary dynamo action associated to the equatorial jet produces banded magnetic features likely observable by the Juno mission. Secular variation in our model scales to about 2000 nT per year and should also be observable during the 1 year nominal mission duration. Key Points First model that reproduces Jupiter's magnetic field Rely on up-to-date ab initio structure models Prediction testable against future Juno's measurements © 2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Gastine, T., Wicht, J., Duarte, L. D. V., Heimpel, M., & Becker, A. (2014). Explaining Jupiter’s magnetic field and equatorial jet dynamics. Geophysical Research Letters, 41(15), 5410–5419. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL060814
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