On the spin-up of an electrically conducting fluid Part 1. The unsteady hydromagnetic Ekman-Hartmann boundary-layer problem

Abstract
The prototype spin-up problem between infinite flat plates treated by Greenspan & Howard (1963) is extended to include the presence of an imposed axial magnetic field. The fluid is homogeneous, viscous, and electrically conducting. The resulting boundary initial-value problem is solved to first order in Rossby number by Laplace transform techniques. In spite of the linearization the complete hydromagnetic interaction is preserved: currents affect the flow and the flow simultaneously distorts the field. In part 1, we analyze the impulsively started time dependent approach to a final steady Ekman–Hartmann boundary layer on a single insulating flat plate. The transient is found to consist of two diffusively growing boundary layers, inertial oscillations, and a weak Alfvén wave front. In part 2, these one plate results are utilized in discussing spin-up between two infinite flat insulating plates. Two distinct and important hydromagnetic spin-up mechanisms are elucidated. In all cases, the spin-up time is found to be shorter than in the corresponding non-magnetic problem.

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