4.8 Article

Meridional flow in the Sun's convection zone is a single cell in each hemisphere

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 368, Issue 6498, Pages 1469-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aaz7119

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Funding

  1. German Aerospace Center [DLR 50OL1701]
  2. European Research Council [WHOLE SUN 810218]
  3. NYUAD Institute [G1502]
  4. International Max Planck Research School (IMPRS) for Solar System Science at the University of Gottingen

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The Sun's magnetic field is generated by subsurface motions of the convecting plasma. The latitude at which the magnetic field emerges through the solar surface (as sunspots) drifts toward the equator over the course of the 11-year solar cycle. We use helioseismology to infer the meridional flow (in the latitudinal and radial directions) over two solar cycles covering 1996-2019. Two data sources are used, which agree during their overlap period of 2001-2011. The time-averaged meridional flow is shown to be a single cell in each hemisphere, carrying plasma toward the equator at the base of the convection zone with a speed of similar to 4 meters per second at 45 degrees latitude. Our results support the flux-transport dynamo model, which explains the drift of sunspot-emergence latitudes through the meridional flow.

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