Evidence for the Magneto-rotational Instability in the Solar Magnetic Cycle
ORAL
Abstract
The Sun’s magnetic cycle displays a pattern of propagating sunspots, starting around 30○ latitude and annihilating near the equator 11 years later. Relative longitudinal flows, called torsional oscillations, track sunspot migration and undoubtedly share a common cause. Notably, helioseismology reveals that low-latitude torsional oscillations only occur within the outer 5–10% in radius, coinciding with an inwardly increasing angular velocity called the Near-Surface Shear Layer (NSSL). Negative differential rotation gradient of sufficient strength with a polar magnetic field signifies the Magneto-Rotational Instability (MRI)—crucial in astrophysical accretion disks. Together, these two facts address the general question: where and how is the solar dynamo operating? Here, we provide evidence that the MRI operates within the NSSL and is essential to understanding the solar dynamo.
–
Publication: Nature, "Evidence that the solar cycle begins with the magnetorotational<br>instability in the near-surface shear layer," 2023, to be submitted.<br><br>MNRAS, "Exploring a Global-Scale Magneto-Rotational Instability in the Sun," 2023, in preparation.
Presenters
-
Kyle Augustson
Northwestern University
Authors
-
Kyle Augustson
Northwestern University
-
Geoffrey Vasil
University of Edinbourgh
-
Daniel Lecoanet
Northwestern