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3 - Observational results and issues concerning the tachocline

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 August 2009

D. W. Hughes
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
R. Rosner
Affiliation:
University of Chicago
N. O. Weiss
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The region near and just below the solar convection zone is characterized by a strong shear in rotation rate, between the latitudinally differential rotation in the convection zone and the nearly uniform rotation of the radiative interior. This so-called tachocline is also a region of substantial uncertainty in the modelling of solar structure, where convective overshoot and rotationally induced mixing may affect the thermal and compositional structure. Helioseismology led to the identification of the rotational shear and has provided fairly detailed information about the properties, structure and rotation of the tachocline, although unavoidably at somewhat limited resolution. Here we briefly discuss the techniques used in the helioseismic analyses and review the results of such analyses, as a background for the modelling of the properties of the tachocline and its effects on the generation of the solar magnetic field.

Introduction

As will be abundantly evident from other articles in this volume, knowledge of the solar internal rotation is essential for understanding solar magnetic activity, as it is for understanding important aspects of solar structure and evolution. Before the advent of helioseismology little was known about solar rotation below the surface, beyond the indication, from the surface latitudinal differential rotation, that it was non-uniform.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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