Time-dependent theory of solar meridional flows
James H. Shirley

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new time-dependent theory linking orbital and rotational motions to solar meridional flows, suggesting a non-tidal, orbit-spin coupling mechanism that influences the solar dynamo and magnetic activity cycles.
Contribution
It introduces a novel orbit-spin coupling hypothesis affecting solar flows and provides algorithms to calculate these accelerations, offering a new perspective on solar cycle variability.
Findings
Significant correlation between the coupling function and meridional flow speeds.
Potential interaction between orbit-spin coupling and the solar dynamo.
Explains variations in solar activity during different cycles.
Abstract
We explore consequences for the solar dynamo of a newly-developed physical hypothesis describing a weak coupling of the orbital and rotational motions of extended bodies. The coupling is given by - c ((dL/dt) x omega sub alpha) x r, where dL/dt represents the rate of change of barycentric orbital angular momentum, omega sub alpha is the angular velocity of rotation, r is a position vector identifying a particular location in a coordinate system rotating with the Sun, and c is a coupling efficiency coefficient. This form of coupling has no dependence on tides. The coupling expression defines a non-axisymmetric global-scale acceleration field that varies both in space and with time. Meridional components of acceleration typically dominate in equatorial and middle latitudes, while zonal accelerations become increasingly significant at higher latitudes. A comparison of the waveform of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
