Is the solar convection zone in strict thermal wind balance?
A.S. Brun (1,2), H.M. Antia (3), K. Chitre (4)

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the solar convection zone adheres to thermal wind balance by comparing helioseismic data with 3-D simulations, concluding that Reynolds stresses are crucial in shaping the observed rotation profile.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between helioseismic inversions and 3-D simulations, challenging the assumption that thermal wind balance alone explains solar rotation.
Findings
Temperature fluctuations are smaller in simulations than in helioseismic inversions.
Baroclinic effects alone cannot account for the solar rotation profile.
Reynolds stresses are essential in explaining the solar convection zone dynamics.
Abstract
Context: The solar rotation profile is conical rather than cylindrical as one could expect from classical rotating fluid dynamics (e.g. Taylor-Proudman theorem). Thermal coupling to the tachocline, baroclinic effects and latitudinal transport of heat have been advocated to explain this peculiar state of rotation. Aims: To test the validity of thermal wind balance in the solar convection zone using helioseismic inversions for both the angular velocity and fluctuations in entropy and temperature. Methods: Entropy and temperature fluctuations obtained from 3-D hydrodynamical numerical simulations of the solar convection zone are compared with solar profiles obtained from helioseismic inversions. Results: The temperature and entropy fluctuations in 3-D numerical simulations have smaller amplitude in the bulk of the solar convection zone than those found from seismic inversions. Seismic…
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