4.7 Article

Transition from multipolar to dipolar dynamos in stratified systems

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 517, Issue 3, Pages 3392-3406

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac2769

Keywords

convection; dynamo; magnetic fields; MHD; turbulence; methods: numerical

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the Horizon 2020 Framework Programme [740651]
  2. Institut Universitaire de France
  3. CNPq
  4. CAPES
  5. FAPEMIG
  6. GENCI-CINES [2020-A0070410970, 2021-A0090410970]
  7. CALMIP [P19031]

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This paper investigates the diversity of surface magnetic field configurations of cool stars using numerical simulations. The results show that dipolar solutions can exist in strongly stratified simulations, contrary to previous beliefs. The simulations resemble the outlier stars observed at Rossby numbers larger than 0.1, suggesting that the relative importance of inertial and Lorentz forces controls the dipolar to multipolar transition. Additionally, the ratio of kinetic to magnetic energies can also capture the transition in field morphology.
Observations of surface magnetic fields of cool stars reveal a large diversity of configurations. Although there is now a consensus that these fields are generated through dynamo processes occurring within the convective zone, the physical mechanism driving such a variety of field topologies is still debated. This paper discusses the possible origins of dipole- and multipole-dominated morphologies using three-dimensional numerical simulations of stratified systems where the magnetic feedback on the fluid motion is significant. Our main result is that dipolar solutions are found at Rossby numbers up to 0.4 in strongly stratified simulations, where previous works suggested that only multipolar fields should exist. We argue that these simulations are reminiscent of the outlier stars observed at Rossby numbers larger than 0.1, whose large-scale magnetic field is dominated by their axisymmetric poloidal component. As suggested in previous Boussinesq calculations, the relative importance of inertial over Lorentz forces is again controlling the dipolar to multipolar transition. Alternatively, we find that the ratio of kinetic to magnetic energies can equally well capture the transition in the field morphology. We test the ability of this new proxy to predict the magnetic morphology of a few M dwarf stars whose internal structure matches that of our simulations and for which homogeneous magnetic field characterization is available. Finally, the magnitude of the differential rotation obtained in our simulations is compared to actual measurements reported in the literature for M dwarfs. In our simulations, we find a clear relationship between antisolar differential rotation and the emergence of dipolar fields.

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