Modeling the Rise of Fibril Magnetic Fields in Fully Convective Stars
Maria A. Weber, Matthew K. Browning

TL;DR
This study uses thin flux tube simulations to explore how magnetic fields rise in fully convective stars, revealing the influence of convection, rotation, and differential rotation on magnetic flux emergence.
Contribution
It is the first to simulate flux tube rise in fully convective stars considering buoyancy, convection, and differential rotation effects.
Findings
Flux tubes tend to rise parallel to the rotation axis.
Differential rotation enables low-latitude flux emergence.
Magnetic pumping suppresses flux rise in deeper interior.
Abstract
Many fully convective stars exhibit a wide variety of surface magnetism, including starspots and chromospheric activity. The manner by which bundles of magnetic field traverse portions of the convection zone to emerge at the stellar surface is not especially well understood. In the Solar context, some insight into this process has been gleaned by regarding the magnetism as consisting partly of idealized thin flux tubes (TFT). Here, we present the results of a large set of TFT simulations in a rotating spherical domain of convective flows representative of a 0.3 solar-mass, main-sequence star. This is the first study to investigate how individual flux tubes in such a star might rise under the combined influence of buoyancy, convection, and differential rotation. A time-dependent hydrodynamic convective flow field, taken from separate 3D simulations calculated with the anelastic…
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