Dynamics in the Ball: Surprising Single-Hemisphere Dynamos in Fully Convective M-dwarf Simulations
POSTER
Abstract
M-dwarf stars are smaller and less luminous than our Sun; unlike our Sun, M-dwarf stars below a certain mass are convective from their cores to their photospheres. These fully convective objects are extremely numerous, very magnetically active, and the likely hosts of many exoplanets. This ball-like interior geometry is unique among all the stars on the main-sequence, and studying dynamics in the ball requires new computational techniques. Here we study, for the first time, dynamo action in simulations of stratified, rotating fully convective M-dwarf stars. We do this using the novel spherical Dedalus pseudospectral framework to capture the coordinate singularity at the center ($r=0$), as well as the north and south pole. We find that surprising single-hemisphere dynamo states are achieved, with most of the global-scale fields located in a single (northern or southern) hemisphere. These dynamos undergo cyclic reversals and exist over a broad range of the parameter space studied so far.
*This work was supported by NASA LWS grant NNX16AC92G, NASA SSW grant 80NSSC19K0026, and NASA HTMS grant 80NSSC20K1280. Computations were conducted with support by the NASA High End Computing (HEC) Program through the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at Ames Research Center on Pleiades with allocation GIDs s1647 and s2114.