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On the influence of gradients in the angular velocity on the solar meridional motions
Authors:Durney  Bernard R.
Affiliation:(1) Physics Department, University of Arizona, 85721 Tucson, AZ, U.S.A.
Abstract:If fluctuations in the density are neglected, the large-scale, axisymmetric azimuthal momentum equation for the solar convection zone (SCZ) contains only the velocity correlations 
$$leftlangle {rho u_r u_o } rightrangle $$
and 
$$leftlangle {rho u_theta  u_o } rightrangle $$
where u are the turbulent convective velocities and the brackets denote a large-scale average. The angular velocity, OHgr, and meridional motions are expanded in Legendre polynomials and in these expansions only the two leading terms are retained (for example, 
$$Omega  = Omega _0 tfrac{1}{2}omega _0 (r) bot omega _2 (r)P_2 (cos theta )$$
where theta is the polar angle). Per hemisphere, the meridional circulation is, in consequence, the superposition of two flows, characterized by one, and two cells in latitude respectively. Two equations can be derived from the azimuthal momentum equation. The first one expresses the conservation of angular momentum and essentially determines the stream function of the one-cell flow in terms of 
$$int_0^pi  {langle rho u_r u_ odot  rangle {text{ sin}}^{text{2}} theta {text{d}}} $$
: the convective motions feed angular momentum to the inner regions of the SCZ and in the steady state a meridional flow must be present to remove this angular momentum. The second equation contains also the integral 
$$int_0^pi  {langle rho u_r u_ odot  rangle {text{ cot}}^{text{2}} theta {text{d}}} $$
indicative of a transport of angular momentum towards the equator.With the help of a formalism developed earlier we evaluate, for solid body rotation, the velocity correlations 
$$C_{r odot }  = int_0^pi  {langle u_r u_ odot  rangle {text{ sin}}^{text{2}} theta {text{d}}} $$
and 
$$C_{0 odot }  = int_0^pi  {langle u_r u_ odot  rangle {text{ cot}}^{text{2}} theta {text{d}}} $$
for several values of an arbitrary parameter, D, left unspecified by the theory. The most striking result of these calculations is the increase of 
$$C_{theta  odot } $$
with D. Next we calculate the turbulent viscosity coefficients defined by 
$$C_{r odot }  = C_{r0}^O  - v_{r odot }^1 rOmega _0 omega _0^1  - v_{r odot }^2 rOmega _0 omega _2^1  - v_{r odot }^3 Omega _0 omega _2 {text{ and }}C_{theta  odot }  = C_0^O  - v_{0 odot }^1 rOmega _0 omega _0^1  - v_{0 odot }^2 rOmega _0 omega _2^1  - v_{theta  odot }^3 Omega _0 omega _2 $$
whereCro0 and Cthetao0 are the velocity correlations for solid body rotation. In these calculations it was assumed that ohgr2 was a linear function of r. The arbitrary parameter D was chosen so that the meridional flow vanishes at the surface for the rotation laws specified below. The coefficients vroi and v0oi that allow for the calculation of Cro and C0o for any specified rotation law (with the proviso that ohgr2 be linear) are the turbulent viscosity coefficients. These coefficients comply well with intuitive expectations: vro1 and –v0o3 are the largest in each group, and v0o3 is negative.The equations for the meridional flow were first solved with ohgr0 and ohgr2 two linear functions of r (ohgr01 = – 2 × 10 –12 cm –1) and (ohgr21 = – 6 × 10 12 cm –1). The corresponding angular velocity increases slightly inwards at the poles and decreases at the equator in broad agreement with heliosismic observations. The computed meridional motions are far too large (ap 150m s–1). Reasonable values for the meridional motions can only be obtained if ohgro (and in consequence OHgr), increase sharply with depth below the surface. The calculated meridional motion at the surface consists of a weak equatorward flow for gq < 29° and of a stronger poleward flow for theta > 29°.In the Sun, the Taylor-Proudman balance (the Coriolis force is balanced by the pressure gradient), must be altered to include the buoyancy force. The consequences of this modification are far reaching: OHgr is not required, now, to be constant along cylinders. Instead, the latitudinal dependence of the superadiabatic gradient is determined by the rotation law. For the above rotation laws, the corresponding latitudinal variations of the convective flux are of the order of 7% in the lower SCZ.
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