The Emergence of Solar Supergranulation as a Natural Consequence of Rotationally-Constrained Interior Convection
Nicholas A. Featherstone, Bradley W. Hindman

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through simulations that solar supergranulation emerges as a natural consequence of rotationally-constrained deep convection, with its scale limited by rotational effects, providing insights into solar interior dynamics.
Contribution
The study shows that supergranulation arises from rotationally-constrained convection, linking surface patterns to deep interior processes and offering a new perspective on solar convection scales.
Findings
Supergranulation scale is set by rotational constraints in deep convection.
Power distribution peaks at a specific wavenumber influenced by rotation.
Estimated solar convective velocity is up to 10 m/s.
Abstract
We investigate how rotationally-constrained, deep convection might give rise to supergranulation, the largest distinct spatial scale of convection observed in the solar photosphere. While supergranulation is only weakly influenced by rotation, larger spatial scales of convection sample the deep convection zone and are presumably rotationally influenced. We present numerical results from a series of nonlinear, 3-D simulations of rotating convection and examine the velocity power distribution realized under a range of Rossby numbers. When rotation is present, the convective power distribution possesses a pronounced peak, at characteristic wavenumber , whose value increases as the Rossby number is decreased. This distribution of power contrasts with that realized in non-rotating convection, where power increases monotonically from high to low wavenumbers. We find that…
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