Abstract

The Sun's differential rotation can be understood in terms of a preferential stabilization of convection (by rotation) in the polar regions of the lower part of the convection zone (where the Taylor number is large). A significant pole-equator difference in flux (Δℱ) can develop deep inside the convection zone which would be unobservable at the surface, because ℱ can be very efficiently reduced by large scale meridional motions rising at the poles and sinking at the equator. This is the sense of circulation needed to produce the observed equatorial acceleration of the Sun. Differential rotation is generated, therefore, in the upper part of the convection zone (where the interaction of rotation with convection is small) and results as the convection zone adjusts to a state of negligible Taylor number.

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