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LES of turbulent convection in solar-type stars and formation of large-scale magnetic structures

133   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Igor Rogachevskii
 Publication date 2011
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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In this study we investigate the effects of turbulent convection on formation of large-scale inhomogeneous magnetic structures by means of Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) for convection in solar-type stars. The main idea of this study is the implementation of a new subgrid-scale model for the effective Lorentz force in a three-dimensional nonlinear radiative magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) code developed for simulating the upper solar convection zone and lower atmosphere. To this end we derived the energy budget equations, which include the effects of the subgrid-scale turbulence on the Lorentz-force, and implemented the new subgrid-scale turbulence model (TELF-Model) in a three-dimensional nonlinear MHD LES code. Using imposed initial vertical and horizontal uniform magnetic fields in LES with the TELF-Model, we have shown that the magnetic flux tubes formation is started when the initial mean magnetic field is larger than a threshold value (about 100 G). This is in agreement with the theoretical studies by Rogachevskii and Kleeorin (2007). We have determined the vertical profiles of the velocity and magnetic fluctuations, total MHD energy and anisotropy of turbulent magneto-convection, kinetic and current and cross helicities.



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82 - A. R. Yeates , G. Hornig 2016
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Convection is the mechanism by which energy is transported through the outermost 30% of the Sun. Solar turbulent convection is notoriously difficult to model across the entire convection zone where the density spans many orders of magnitude. In this issue of PNAS, Hanasoge et al. (2012) employ recent helioseismic observations to derive stringent empirical constraints on the amplitude of large-scale convective velocities in the solar interior. They report an upper limit that is far smaller than predicted by a popular hydrodynamic numerical simulation.
We present a statistical analysis of turbulent convection in stars within our Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) framework in spherical geometry which we derived from first principles. The primary results reported in this document include: (1) an extensive set of mean-field equations for compressible, multi-species hydrodynamics, and (2) corresponding mean-field data computed from various simulation models. Some supplementary scale analysis data is also presented. The simulation data which is presented includes: (1) shell convection during oxygen burning in a 23 solar mass supernova progenitor, (2) envelope convection in a 5 solar mass red giant, (3) shell convection during the helium flash, and (4) a hydrogen injection flash in a 1.25 solar mass star. These simulations have been partially described previously in Meakin [2006], Meakin and Arnett [2007a,b, 2010], Arnett et al. [2009, 2010], Viallet et al. [2011, 2013a,b] and Mocak et al. [2009, 2011]. New data is also included in this document with several new domain and resolution configurations as well as some variations in the physical model such as convection zone depth and driving source term. The long term goal of this work is to aid in the development of more sophisticated models for treating hydrodynamic phenomena (e.g., turbulent convection) in the field of stellar evolution by providing a direct link between 3D simulation data and the mean fields which are modeled by 1D stellar evolution codes. As such, this data can be used to test previously proposed turbulence models found in the literature and sometimes used in stellar modeling. This data can also serve to test basic physical principles for model building and inspire new prescriptions for use in 1D evolution codes.
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