The Meridional Circulation of the Sun: Observations, Theory and Connections with the Solar Dynamo
Arnab Rai Choudhuri

TL;DR
This paper reviews the observations and theory of the Sun's meridional circulation, its role in the solar dynamo, and how magnetic fields influence large-scale solar flows, highlighting the importance of circulation fluctuations in solar cycle irregularities.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of observational data and theoretical models of solar meridional circulation and its connection to the solar dynamo, emphasizing the role of turbulence and magnetic feedback.
Findings
Evidence for equatorward return flow at the convection zone base.
Meridional circulation fluctuations explain solar cycle irregularities.
Magnetic fields can induce periodic flow variations with the solar cycle.
Abstract
The meridional circulation of the Sun, which is observed to be poleward at the surface, should have a return flow at some depth. Since large-scale flows like the differential rotation and the meridional circulation are driven by turbulent stresses in the convection zone, these flows are expected to remain confined within this zone. Current observational (based on helioseismology) and theoretical (based on dynamo theory) evidences point towards an equatorward return flow of the meridional circulation at the bottom of the convection zone. Assuming the mean values of various quantities averaged over turbulence to be axisymmetric, we study the large-scale flows in solar-like stars on the basis of a 2D mean field theory. Turbulent stresses in a rotating star can transport angular momentum, setting up a differential rotation. The meridional circulation arises from a slight imbalance between…
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