Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- I Setting the scene
- II Observations
- III Hydrodynamic models
- IV Hydromagnetic properties
- 7 Magnetic confinement of the solar tachocline
- 8 Magnetic confinement and the sharp tachopause
- 9 β-Plane MHD turbulence and dissipation in the solar tachocline
- V Instabilities
- VI Dynamo action
- VII Overview
- Index
7 - Magnetic confinement of the solar tachocline
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- I Setting the scene
- II Observations
- III Hydrodynamic models
- IV Hydromagnetic properties
- 7 Magnetic confinement of the solar tachocline
- 8 Magnetic confinement and the sharp tachopause
- 9 β-Plane MHD turbulence and dissipation in the solar tachocline
- V Instabilities
- VI Dynamo action
- VII Overview
- Index
Summary
Two distinct classes of magnetic confinement models exist for the solar tachocline. The ‘slow tachocline’ models are associated with a large-scale primordial field embedded in the radiative zone. The ‘fast tachocline’ models are associated with an overlying dynamo field. I describe the results obtained in each case, their pros and cons, and compare them with existing solar observations. I conclude by discussing new lines of investigation that should be pursued, as well as some means by which these models could be unified or reconciled.
Introduction
Magnetic fields in the tachocline
Two distinct possible origins for solar magnetic fields in the tachocline region can be identified. The Ohmic decay timescale of a large-scale dipolar field embedded in the radiative interior is much larger than the estimated age of the Sun (Cowling 1945; Garaud 1999), so that a fraction of the magnetic flux initially frozen within the accreting protostellar gas is likely to persist today. In parallel, according to the standard dynamo field theory, small-scale magnetic fields are thought to be constantly generated by fluid motions within the solar interior. Optimal conditions for the generation of large-scale fields require the combination of large-scale azimuthal shear and small-scale helical motion, which are both naturally found in the region of the tachocline (Parker 1993; Ossendrijver 2003; Tobias 2005).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Solar Tachocline , pp. 147 - 182Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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