Invited Speaker: Hale Prize - How the Cycle Does and Does Not Work

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Scientific paper

The talk will present a personal view of our current understanding of the solar cycle. Central points are the role of magnetic buoyancy as the main driving force (together with differential rotation), and the absence of an essential role for the radial shear in the tachocline. The resulting view is essentially that of Babcock and Leighton of half a century ago, but now supported by much more observational and theoretical evidence. I will show how the traditional interpretation of the cycle as a dynamo driven by convective turbulence is (and has always been) incompatible with the observations, as well as with the numerical results that have accumulated over the past decade. Instead, I will argue that to make progress it will pay off i) to directly confront a couple of currently somewhat neglected theoretical problems, and ii) to address some well-known observational puzzles that have not yet found convincing interpretations in theories of the cycle but may well hold critical clues.

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