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Main Authors: Rozelot, Jean-Pierre, Kosovichev, Alexander, Kitiashvili, Irina
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.08021
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author Rozelot, Jean-Pierre
Kosovichev, Alexander
Kitiashvili, Irina
author_facet Rozelot, Jean-Pierre
Kosovichev, Alexander
Kitiashvili, Irina
contents The discovery of the solar activity cycle was linked from the outset to the observation of the temporal variability of sunspots, which we know to be the result of complex processes associated with the dynamics of inner layers. Numerous recent studies have highlighted changes in the Sun's Near-Surface Shear Layer (NSSL), pointing to the role of the leptocline, a shallow and sharp rotational shear layer in the top around 8 Mm. The leptocline, mainly characterized by a strong radial rotational gradient at middle latitudes and self-organized meridional flows, is the cradle of numerous phenomena: opacity, superadiabaticity, and turbulent pressure changes; the hydrogen and helium ionization processes; a sharp decrease in the sound speed; and, probably, variations of the seismic radius associated with a nonmonotonic expansion of subsurface layers with depth. In addition, the leptocline may play a key role in forming the magnetic butterfly diagram. Such results are a starting point for further systematic investigations of the structure and dynamics of this layer, which will lead to a better understanding of solar activity.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_08021
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Improving Our Knowledge of the Solar Near-Surface Shear Layer: The Special Case of the Leptocline
Rozelot, Jean-Pierre
Kosovichev, Alexander
Kitiashvili, Irina
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
The discovery of the solar activity cycle was linked from the outset to the observation of the temporal variability of sunspots, which we know to be the result of complex processes associated with the dynamics of inner layers. Numerous recent studies have highlighted changes in the Sun's Near-Surface Shear Layer (NSSL), pointing to the role of the leptocline, a shallow and sharp rotational shear layer in the top around 8 Mm. The leptocline, mainly characterized by a strong radial rotational gradient at middle latitudes and self-organized meridional flows, is the cradle of numerous phenomena: opacity, superadiabaticity, and turbulent pressure changes; the hydrogen and helium ionization processes; a sharp decrease in the sound speed; and, probably, variations of the seismic radius associated with a nonmonotonic expansion of subsurface layers with depth. In addition, the leptocline may play a key role in forming the magnetic butterfly diagram. Such results are a starting point for further systematic investigations of the structure and dynamics of this layer, which will lead to a better understanding of solar activity.
title Improving Our Knowledge of the Solar Near-Surface Shear Layer: The Special Case of the Leptocline
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.08021