The shape of convection in 2D and 3D global simulations of stellar interiors
M.-G. Dethero, J. Pratt, D.G. Vlaykov, I. Baraffe, T. Guillet, T., Goffrey, A. Le Saux, and A. Morison

TL;DR
This study compares different definitions of the convective filling factor in 2D and 3D stellar interior simulations, introducing new metrics that better capture boundary layer dynamics and differences between simulation dimensions.
Contribution
The paper evaluates existing filling factor definitions and proposes two new parameters to distinguish 2D and 3D convective behaviors near stellar boundaries.
Findings
Volume and mass flux filling factors show symmetry at convective boundaries.
Convective flux-based filling factor is affected by boundary-layer flows.
New parameters effectively differentiate 2D and 3D simulation behaviors.
Abstract
Theoretical descriptions of convective overshooting often rely on a one-dimensional parameterization of the flow called the filling factor for convection. Several definitions of the filling factor have been developed, based on: (1) the percentage of the volume, (2) the mass flux, and (3) the convective flux that moves through the boundary. We examine these definitions of the filling factor with the goal of establishing their ability to explain differences between 2D and 3D global simulations of stellar interiors that include fully compressible hydrodynamics and realistic microphysics for stars. We study pairs of identical two- and three-dimensional global simulations of stars produced with MUSIC, a fully compressible, time-implicit hydrodynamics code. We examine (1) a red giant star near the first dredge-up point, (2) a pre-main-sequence star with a large…
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