Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 540, Issue 1, Pages 548-562Publisher
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/309316
Keywords
MHD; methods : numerical; Sun : interior; Sun : magnetic fields
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We present three-dimensional numerical simulations of the rise and fragmentation of twisted, initially horizontal magnetic flux tubes that evolve into emerging Omega-loops. The flux tubes rise buoyantly through an adiabatically stratified plasma that represents the solar convection zone. The MHD equations are solved in the anelastic approximation, and the results are compared with studies of Aux-tube Fragmentation in two dimensions. We find that if the initial amount of field line twist is below a critical value, the degree of fragmentation at the apex of a rising Omega-loop depends on its three-dimensional geometry: the greater the apex curvature of a given Omega-loop, the lesser the degree of fragmentation of the loop as it approaches the photosphere. Thus, the amount of initial twist necessary for the loop to retain its cohesion can be reduced substantially from the two-dimensional limit. The simulations also suggest that, as a fragmented flux tube emerges through a relatively quiet portion of the salar disk, extended crescent-shaped magnetic features of opposite polarity should form and steadily recede from one another. These features eventually coalesce after the fragmented portion of the Omega-loop emerges through the photosphere.
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