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arxiv: astro-ph/0604451 · v1 · submitted 2006-04-21 · 🌌 astro-ph

Solar differential rotation and meridional flow: The role of a subadiabatic tachocline for the Taylor-Proudman balance

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords rotationdifferentialflowreynoldsconvectionmeridionalstresszone
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We present a simple model for the solar differential rotation and meridional circulation based on a mean field parameterization of the Reynolds stresses that drive the differential rotation. We include the subadiabatic part of the tachocline and show that this, in conjunction with turbulent heat conductivity within the convection zone and overshoot region, provides the key physics to break the Taylor-Proudman constraint, which dictates differential rotation with contour lines parallel to the axis of rotation in case of an isentropic stratification. We show that differential rotation with contour lines inclined by 10 - 30 degrees with respect to the axis of rotation is a robust result of the model, which does not depend on the details of the Reynolds stress and the assumed viscosity, as long as the Reynolds stress transports angular momentum toward the equator. The meridional flow is more sensitive with respect to the details of the assumed Reynolds stress, but a flow cell, equatorward at the base of the convection zone and poleward in the upper half of the convection zone, is the preferred flow pattern.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Towards inertial-mode helioseismology: Direct sensing of solar rotation at 75 deg latitude and 0.8 Rsun

    astro-ph.SR 2026-05 conditional novelty 7.0

    The m=1 high-latitude inertial mode frequency implies solar rotation of 365.3 nHz at 75° latitude and 0.8 R_sun, exceeding the p-mode reference by 8.1 nHz.