Structure and stability of the magnetic solar tachocline

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Date
2007
Volume
9
Issue
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
College Park, MD : Institute of Physics Publishing
Abstract

Rather weak fossil magnetic fields in the radiative core can produce the solar tachocline if the field is almost horizontal in the tachocline region, i.e. if the field is confined within the core. This particular field geometry is shown to result from a shallow (≲1 Mm) penetration of the meridional flow existing in the convection zone into the radiative core. Two conditions are thus crucial for a magnetic tachocline theory: (i) the presence of meridional flow of a few metres per second at the base of the convection zone, and (ii) a magnetic diffusivity inside the tachocline smaller than 108 cm 2 s-1. Numerical solutions for the confined poloidal fields and the resulting tachocline structures are presented. We find that the tachocline thickness runs as Bp-1/2 with the poloidal field amplitude falling below 5% of the solar radius for Bp > 5 mG. The resulting toroidal field amplitude inside the tachocline of about 100 G does not depend on the Bp. The hydromagnetic stability of the tachocline is only briefly discussed. For the hydrodynamic stability of latitudinal differential rotation we found that the critical 29% of the 2D theory of Watson (1981 Geophys. Astrophys. Fluid Dyn. 16 285) are reduced to only 21% in 3D for marginal modes of about 6 Mm radial scale. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

Description
Keywords
Diffusion, Heat convection, Magnetic fields, Radiation, Hydromagnetic stability, Meridional flow, Particular field geometry, Radiative core, Solar tachocline, Magnetohydrodynamics
Citation
Rüdiger, G., & Kitchatinov, L. L. (2007). Structure and stability of the magnetic solar tachocline. 9. https://doi.org//10.1088/1367-2630/9/8/302
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License
CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 Unported