Bibcode
DOI
Emonet, T.; Moreno-Insertis, F.
Bibliographical reference
Astrophysical Journal v.458, p.783
Advertised on:
2
1996
Citations
12
Refereed citations
11
Description
The equilibrium of non-force-free twisted horizontal magnetic flux tubes
is studied including gravity and an arbitrary pressure perturbation on
the tube boundary. To solve this free-boundary problem, we use general
nonorthogonal flux coordinates and consider the two-dimensional case in
which there is no variation of the physical quantities along the tube
axis. For the applications in the convection zone and corona, we
consider the case of weak external stratification by assuming that the
radius of the tube is smaller than the external pressure scale height.
This allows us to introduce a perturbation scheme which is much less
restrictive than the customary slender flux-tube approximation. In
particular, it has the advantage of not imposing any limitation on the
strength of the azimuthal field as compared to the longitudinal field.
Within this scheme, one retains to zero order all the functional degrees
of freedom of a general axisymmetric magnetostatic equilibrium; the
geometry of the perturbed azimuthal field lines is then obtained from
the equilibrium equations as a consequence of the zero-order density (or
rather buoyancy) distribution in the tube and of the circular wavenumber
of the external pressure perturbation. We show that, as a result of the
presence of gravity, the field lines are no longer concentric, although
they continue being circular. The resulting changes in magnetic pressure
and tension of the azimuthal field exactly counteract the differences in
buoyancy in the tube cross section. On the other hand, external pressure
fluctuations of circular wavenumber higher than one can only be
countered by bending the azimuthal field lines. In general terms, the
present scheme allows one to study in detail the mutual dependence of
the (differential) buoyancy in the tube, the intensity and field line
geometry of the azimuthal magnetic field, and the gas pressure and
longitudinal magnetic field distributions.
The main application of the equations and results of this paper is to
study the transverse structure of magnetic flux rings embedded in a
stratified medium with a flow around the tube that causes pressure
fluctuations on its surface. This includes tubes in the deep convection
zone, e.g., in its subadiabatic lower part, or those kept in place by a
meridional flow. It also applies to flux rings moving in a quasi-static
regime in which the drag force of the relative motion with respect to
the external medium exactly compensates the total buoyancy of the tube.
In this way, this study can complement the numerical simulations of the
rise of magnetized tubes and bubbles toward the surface.