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We study the connection between spherical wedge and full spherical shell geometries using simple mean-field $alpha^2$ dynamos. We solve the equations for a one-dimensional time-dependent mean-field dynamo to examine the effects of varying the polar angle $theta_0$ between the latitudinal boundaries and the poles in spherical coordinates. We investigate the effects of turbulent magnetic diffusivity and $alpha$ effect profiles as well as different latitudinal boundary conditions to isolate parameter regimes where oscillatory solutions are found. Finally, we add shear along with a damping term mimicking radial gradients to study the resulting dynamo regimes. We find that the commonly used perfect conductor boundary condition leads to oscillatory $alpha^2$ dynamo solutions only if the wedge boundary is at least one degree away from the poles. Other boundary conditions always produce stationary solutions. By varying the profile of the turbulent magnetic diffusivity alone, oscillatory solutions are achieved with models extending to the poles, but the magnetic field is strongly concentrated near the poles and the oscillation period is very long. By introducing radial shear and a damping term mimicking radial gradients, we again see oscillatory dynamos, and the direction of drift follows the Parker--Yoshimura rule. Oscillatory solutions in the weak shear regime are found only in the wedge case with $theta_0 = 1^circ$ and perfect conductor boundaries. A reduced $alpha$ effect near the poles with a turbulent diffusivity concentrated toward the equator yields oscillatory dynamos with equatorward migration and reproduces best the solutions in spherical wedges.
We study activity waves of the kind that determine cyclic magnetic activity of various stars, including the Sun, as a more general physical rather than a purely astronomical problem. We try to identify resonances which are expected to occur when a me
Magnetic helicity fluxes in turbulently driven alpha^2 dynamos are studied to demonstrate their ability to alleviate catastrophic quenching. A one-dimensional mean-field formalism is used to achieve magnetic Reynolds numbers of the order of 10^5. We
(abidged) Context: Stellar convection zones are characterized by vigorous high-Reynolds number turbulence at low Prandtl numbers. Aims: We study the dynamo and differential rotation regimes at varying levels of viscous, thermal, and magnetic diffusio
We present nonlinear mean-field alpha-Omega dynamo simulations in spherical geometry with simplified profiles of kinematic alpha effect and shear. We take magnetic helicity evolution into account by solving a dynamical equation for the magnetic alpha
Zeldovichs stretch-twist fold (STF) dynamo provided a breakthrough in conceptual understanding of fast dynamos, including fluctuation or small scale dynamos. We study the evolution and saturation behaviour of two types of Bakers map dynamos, which ha