Magnetic flux concentrations in a polytropic atmosphere
I. R. Losada, A. Brandenburg, N. Kleeorin, I. Rogachevskii

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic flux concentration formation in polytropic atmospheres, revealing how stratification affects structure size, growth rate, and the potential for sunspot formation, extending previous isothermal models.
Contribution
It generalizes earlier isothermal models to polytropic layers, analyzing how decreasing scale height influences magnetic structure formation and growth rates.
Findings
Magnetic structures form at 3-4% of local equipartition field strength.
Growth rates decrease for deeper structures in polytropic layers.
Super-equipartition magnetic flux concentrations can form with vertical fields.
Abstract
Strongly stratified hydromagnetic turbulence has recently been identified as a candidate for explaining the spontaneous formation of magnetic flux concentrations by the negative effective magnetic pressure instability (NEMPI). Much of this work has been done for isothermal layers for which the density scale height is constant throughout. We now study the validity of earlier conclusions about the size and growth rate of magnetic structures in the case of polytropic layers, which scale height decreases sharply towards the surface. To allow for a continuous transition from isothermal to polytropic layers, we employ a generalization of the exponential function known as the q-exponential. Now, the top of the polytropic layer shifts with the polytropic index such that the scale height at some reference height is always the same. We use both mean-field and direct numerical simulations of…
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