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Explaining the Coexistence of Large-Scale and Small-Scale Magnetic Fields in fully Convective Stars
ISSN
2041-8213
2041-8205
Date Issued
2015
Author(s)
Yadav, Rakesh K.
Christensen, Ulrich R.
Morin, Julien
Gastine, Thomas
Poppenhaeger, Katja
Wolk, Scott J.
DOI
10.1088/2041-8205/813/2/L31
Abstract
Despite the lack of a shear-rich tachocline region, low-mass fully convective (FC) stars are capable of generating strong magnetic fields, indicating that a dynamo mechanism fundamentally different from the solar dynamo is at work in these objects. We present a self-consistent three-dimensional model of magnetic field generation in low-mass FC stars. The model utilizes the anelastic magnetohydrodynamic equations to simulate compressible convection in a rotating sphere. A distributed dynamo working in the model spontaneously produces a dipole-dominated surface magnetic field of the observed strength. The interaction of this field with the turbulent convection in outer layers shreds it, producing small-scale fields that carry most of the magnetic flux. The Zeeman-Doppler-Imaging technique applied to synthetic spectropolarimetric data based on our model recovers most of the large-scale field. Our model simultaneously reproduces the morphology and magnitude of the large-scale field as well as the magnitude of the small-scale field observed on low-mass FC stars.