1 / 22

Magnetic models of solar-like stars

Magnetic models of solar-like stars. Laurène Jouve (Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie) B-Cool meeting December 2011. Solar type stars ( late F, G and early K-type ). Over 111 stars in HK project : 31 flat or linear signal 29 irregular variables

tyra
Télécharger la présentation

Magnetic models of solar-like stars

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Magnetic models of solar-like stars Laurène Jouve (Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie) B-Cool meeting December 2011

  2. Solar type stars (late F, G and earlyK-type) Over 111 stars in HK project: 31 flat or linear signal 29 irregular variables 51 + Sun possess a magneticcycle Wilson 1978 Baliunas et al. 1995 CaII H & K lines , <R’HK>

  3. Solar type stars (late F, G and earlyK-type) Pcyc=Prot1.25+/-0.5 They takeintoaccount the characteristics of convection (the convective overturning time via Rossbynumber: Ro=Prot/t): Pcyc=(1/Ro)1.28+/-0.48 Noyes et al. 1984

  4. Solar type stars (late F, G and earlyK-type) Independant fit: Pcyc ~Protn, n ~ 0.8 for active branch, 1.15 for inactive Single power lawcan fit data: w_cycle ~ W-0.09, but withmuchhigher dispersion in fit Saar & Brandenburg, 99; Saar 02, 05

  5. More recent observations Field configuration: More and more toroidal Multipolar field Petit et al. 2008, MNRAS ESPADONS/NARVAL

  6. More recent observations: cycles? Donati et al, 2008, MNRAS; Fares et al, 2009, MNRAS: tboo: 2 years ? Petit et al, 2009, MNRAS: HD 190771 Garcia et al, 2010, Science: HD 49933: 120 days?

  7. Schematic theoretical view of the solar cycle 4: Parker instability 5: emergence+rotation 6: recycling through -effect or 7: emergence of twisted bipolar structures at the surface 1: magneticfieldgeneration, self-induction 2: pumping of mag. field or 2’: transport by meridional flow 3: stretching of fieldlinesthrougheffect

  8. The Babcock-Leightonflux-transport model (Babcock 1961, Leighton 1969, Wang & Sheeley 1991) • Source of poloidal • fieldlinked to • the rise of • toroidal flux • concentrations • Transport by • meridional circulation • within the • convection zone • 2 coupledPDEs: Standard source term: 4 « Ad hoc » latitudinal dependence Toroidal field at the base of the CZ Quenching Confinement at the surface 8

  9. The Babcock-Leighton model for the Sun Standard model: single-celled meridional circulation Cyclic field Butterfly diagram close to observations Parameters: v0=6.4 m.s-1 t=5x1010cm2.s -1 s0=20 cm.s-1 eq=460 nHz Solar-like differential rotation Magneticperiodcruciallydepends on MC amplitude

  10. What prescriptions canwe use from 3D models? Dikpati et al. 2001 assumedVp~W Charbonneau & Saar 2001 assumedVpαWor log(W) Scaling of MC deducedfrom Brown et al. 2008: VpαW-0.9 DW increaseswithW

  11. Babcock-Leighton model and stars 0.5 Wsol StrongerBtor compared to Bpol time 5 Wsol Pcyc = 20 yr Slower cycle when Wincreased time Jouve, Brown, Brun, A&A 2010

  12. Babcock-Leighton model and stars Scaling of DWwithW? Observations are unclear: eitherstrong dependency (Donahue et al. 96) or weakdependency (Barnes et al. 2005). 3D modelsgivedifferentanswers in HD or MHD. We assume extremeobs value to maximizeeffect: DW~W0.7 Stronger DW = 3 DW sol 5 Wsol Pcyc = 20 yrstill, so no effect time

  13. Babcock-Leighton model and stars Can wereconcilethis model withstellar datausing a more complex MC? Multicell meridional flow 5 Wsol, Pcyc = 5.2 yr, better agreement time

  14. 3D simulations: HD vs MHD models DW reduced in the MHD case 3Wsol, with no tachocline, ASH MHD HD DW lessdependent on W than in the HD case

  15. 3D simulations: strongtoroidalbelts Emag/Ekin=10% MeanEmag=47% MeanEpol=4%Emag_tot Toroidal field mainly due to the Omega effect inside the CZ. Poloidal field due to the turbulent emf: <u’ x b’> No clear alpha effect: no relationship between the emf and the mean toroidal field. Brown et al, ApJ 2010

  16. 3D simulations: time-dependenttoroidalbelts Star rotating at 5Wsol: Toroidal structures migrate towards the poles. Reconnections occurat the Equator. Max Btor=40kG Brown et al, ApJ 2011

  17. 3D simulations: signs of cyclicactivity Evidence of a 1500-day cycle Reversals as well as excursions Cycles due to spatial and temporal shifts between the source terms of poloidal andtoroidalfields

  18. 3D simulations In the Sun: Rossby number of order unity. Small values of the magnetic diffusivities are needed to get cyclicbehaviour.

  19. 3D simulations: the solar case Developed convection Solar-like rotation Weak meridional flow (2m.s-1 at the surface) EULAG code MHD simulation of a CZ with no tachocline Ghizaru et al., ApJ, 2010 Racine et al., ApJ, 2011

  20. 3D simulations: the solar case Large-scale magnetic cycle! Looks like an aW dynamo BUT: no explicit diffusion coefficients!

  21. Conclusions? • Mean-field models: • Magneticevolution of other stars: constrainingsolarmodels • Otherdifficulties for Babcock-Leightonmodels • Refinedmodelswithadditional transport processes • 3D numerical simulations: • Rapidlyrotating stars: dominant toroidalwreaths • Cycles obtained in modelswithouttachoclines • (fundamentalrole of gradients of Omega in the whole convection zone) • Dynamo not relying on a basic alpha effect

  22. Oui mais bon…

More Related