Meridional Circulation in Solar and Stellar Convection Zones
Nicholas A. Featherstone, Mark S. Miesch

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to explore how different regimes of stellar rotation influence meridional circulation patterns and angular momentum transport, revealing the transition mechanisms between solar-like and anti-solar states.
Contribution
It demonstrates how convective Reynolds stress governs meridional flow profiles and identifies the transition criteria between different rotational regimes in stellar convection zones.
Findings
Reynolds stress drives meridional circulation profiles.
Transition from single- to multi-celled circulation linked to Reynolds stress change.
Solar-like and anti-solar regimes show distinct thermal and flow characteristics.
Abstract
We present a series of 3-D nonlinear simulations of solar-like convection, carried out using the Anelastic Spherical Harmonic (ASH) code, that are designed to isolate those processes that drive and shape meridional circulations within stellar convection zones. These simulations have been constructed so as to span the transition between solar-like differential rotation (fast equator/slow poles) and ``anti-solar' differential rotation (slow equator/fast poles). Solar-like states of differential rotation, arising when convection is rotationally constrained, are characterized by a very different convective Reynolds stress than anti-solar regimes, wherein convection only weakly senses the Coriolis force. We find that the angular momentum transport by convective Reynolds stress plays a central role in establishing the meridional flow profiles in these simulations. We find that the transition…
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