Mechanism of local dynamo action on the Sun

Abstract

In the quiet Sun, magnetic fields are usually observed as small-scale magnetic elements, `salt and pepper', covering the entire solar surface. By using 3D radiative MHD numerical simulations we demonstrate that these fields are a result of local dynamo action in the top layers of the convection zone, where extremely weak `seed' magnetic fields can locally grow above the mean equipartition field (e.g., from a 10-6 G `seed' field to more than 1000 G magnetic structures). We find that the local dynamo action takes place only in a shallow, about 500 km deep, subsurface layer, from which the generated field is transported into deeper layers by convection downdrafts. We demonstrate that the observed dominance of vertical magnetic fields at the photosphere and the horizontal fields above the photosphere can be explained by multi-scale magnetic loops produced by the dynamo.

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