Bibcode
Losada, I.R.; Brandenburg, A.; Kleeorin, N.; Mitra, D.; Rogachevskii, I.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 548, id.A49, 8 pp.
Advertised on:
12
2012
Journal
Citations
18
Refereed citations
17
Description
Context. The surface layers of the Sun are strongly stratified. In the
presence of turbulence with a weak mean magnetic field, a large-scale
instability resulting in the formation of nonuniform magnetic
structures, can be excited on the scale of many (more than ten)
turbulent eddies (or convection cells). This instability is caused by a
negative contribution of turbulence to the effective (mean-field)
magnetic pressure and has previously been discussed in connection with
the formation of active regions. Aims: We want to understand the
effects of rotation on this instability in both two and three
dimensions. Methods: We use mean-field magnetohydrodynamics in a
parameter regime in which the properties of the negative effective
magnetic pressure instability have previously been found to agree with
properties of direct numerical simulations. Results: We find that
the instability is already suppressed for relatively slow rotation with
Coriolis numbers (i.e. inverse Rossby numbers) around 0.2. The
suppression is strongest at the equator. In the nonlinear regime, we
find traveling wave solutions with propagation in the prograde direction
at the equator with additional poleward migration away from the equator.
Conclusions: We speculate that the prograde rotation of the
magnetic pattern near the equator might be a possible explanation for
the faster rotation speed of magnetic tracers relative to the plasma
velocity on the Sun. In the bulk of the domain, kinetic and current
helicities are negative in the northern hemisphere and positive in the
southern.
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