Confinement of the Sun's interior magnetic field, with implications for lithium burning
Toby S. Wood, Michael E. McIntyre

TL;DR
This paper presents new analytical and numerical models demonstrating how the Sun's interior magnetic field can be confined by a laminar layer at the tachocline, explaining uniform rotation and implications for lithium burning.
Contribution
It introduces self-consistent solutions for magnetic confinement layers at the solar tachocline, incorporating all relevant physical effects, and links magnetic confinement to solar lithium depletion.
Findings
Magnetic confinement layers can prevent field diffusion into the convection zone.
A weak downwelling flow enforces exponential decay of the magnetic field.
The model suggests a connection between magnetic confinement and lithium burning.
Abstract
The simplest interior magnetic field B_i that can explain the observed uniform rotation of the Sun's radiative envelope is an axial dipole stabilized by a deep toroidal field. It can explain the uniform rotation only if confined in the polar caps. The field must be prevented from diffusing up into the high-latitude convection zone, whose slower rotation must remain decoupled from the radiative interior. This paper describes new analytical and numerical solutions of the relevant magnetohydrodynamic equations showing that such confinement and decoupling is dynamically possible by means of a laminar "magnetic confinement layer" at the bottom of the tachocline. With realistic values of the microscopic diffusivities, a weak laminar downwelling flow U~10^{-5}cm/s over the poles is enough to enforce exponential decay of B_i with altitude, in a confinement layer only a fraction of a megameter…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
