Can superflares occur on the Sun? A view from dynamo theory
M.M.Katsova, L.L.Kitchatinov, M.A.Livshits, D.L.Moss, D.D.Sokoloff and, I.G.Usoskin

TL;DR
This paper explores whether the Sun could produce superflares by examining dynamo mechanisms, suggesting that certain magnetic configurations driven by anti-solar differential rotation could generate the necessary magnetic energy.
Contribution
It proposes a dynamo model involving anti-solar differential rotation to explain superflares on Sun-like stars, extending the understanding of stellar magnetic activity beyond the solar paradigm.
Findings
Anti-solar differential rotation can produce stronger magnetic fields.
Numerical dynamo models support the proposed mechanism.
The model explains superflares in various cool star types.
Abstract
Recent data from the Kepler mission has revealed the occurrence of superflares in sun-like stars which exceed by far any observed solar flares in release of energy. A natural idea is that the dynamo mechanism in superflaring stars differs in some respect from that in the Sun. We search for a difference in the dynamo-related parameters between superflaring stars and the Sun to suggest a dynamo-mechanism as close as possible to the conventional solar/stellar dynamo but capable of providing much higher magnetic energy. Dynamo based on joint action of differential rotation and mirror asymmetric motions can in principle result in excitation of two types of magnetic fields. First of all, it is well-known in solar physics dynamo waves. The point is that another magnetic configuration with initial growth and further stabilisation is also possible for excitation. For comparable conditions,…
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