Generation solar-like differential rotation
H. Hotta, K. Kusano, R. Shimada

TL;DR
This paper analyzes high-resolution simulation data to understand how strong magnetic fields and energy transport mechanisms maintain solar-like differential rotation, especially the fast equator, without manipulating parameters.
Contribution
It reveals the role of magnetic fields and energy transport in sustaining solar-like differential rotation, addressing the convective conundrum with novel insights.
Findings
Superequipatition magnetic fields are generated by compression.
Small-scale energy transport suppresses large-scale convection.
Magnetic fields maintain non-Taylor--Proudman differential rotation.
Abstract
We analyze the simulation result shown in Hotta & Kusano, 2021 in which the solar-like differential rotation is reproduced. The Sun is rotating differentially with the fast equator and the slow pole. It is widely thought that the thermal convection maintains the differential rotation, but recent high-resolution simulations tend to fail to reproduce the fast equator. This fact is an aspect of one of the biggest problems in solar physics called the convective conundrum. Hotta & Kusano, 2021 succeed in reproducing the solar-like differential rotation without using any manipulation with unprecedentedly high-resolution simulation. In this study, we analyze the simulation data to understand the maintenance mechanism of the fast equator. Our analyses lead to conclusions that are summarized as follows. 1. Superequipatition magnetic field is generated by the compression, which can indirectly…
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