| dc.description.abstract | Vortex–magnetic interactions shape magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence, influencing
energy transfer in astrophysical, geophysical and industrial systems. In the solar
atmosphere, granular-scale vortex flows couple strongly with magnetic fields, channelling
energy into the corona. At high Reynolds numbers, vorticity and magnetic fields are nearly
frozen into the charged fluid, and MHD flows emerge from the Lorentz force mediated
interactions between coherent vortex structures in matter and the field. To probe this
competition in a controlled setting, we revisit the canonical problem of two antiparallel
flux tubes. By varying the magnetic flux threading each tube – and thus sweeping the
interaction parameter Ni , which gauges Lorentz-to-inertial force balance – we uncover
three distinct regimes: vortex-dominated joint reconnection, instability-triggered cascade,
and Lorentz-induced vortex disruption. At low Ni , classical vortex dynamics dominates,
driving joint vortex–magnetic reconnection, and amplifying magnetic energy via a
dynamo effect. At moderate Ni , the system oscillates between vorticity-driven attraction
and magnetic damping, triggering instabilities and nonlinear interactions that spawn
secondary filaments and drive an energy cascade. At high Ni , Lorentz forces suppress
vortex interactions, aligning the tubes axially while disrupting vortex cores and rapidly
converting magnetic to kinetic energy. These findings reveal how the inertial–Lorentz
balance governs energy transfer and coherent structure formation in MHD turbulence,
offering insight into vortex–magnetic co-evolution in astrophysical plasmas. | es_ES |