Helioseismology

A computer-generated image showing the pattern of a p-mode solar acoustic oscillation both in the interior and on the surface of the sun. (l=20, m=16, and n=14.) Note that the increase in the speed of sound as waves approach the center of the sun causes a corresponding increase in the acoustic wavelength.

Helioseismology is the process of inferring the internal structure and kinematics of the Sun from the propagation of seismic waves, particularly acoustic waves (p waves) and surface gravity waves (f waves).[1] It was developed by analogy to geoseismology (originally called simply seismology), and subsequently there emerged asteroseismology,[2] in which seismic waves are analysed to constrain the internal structures of other stars. Because the Sun is fluid, to a first approximation it cannot support shear waves (s-waves), unlike the seismic waves on Earth. An exception is the magneto-acoustic waves which appear to be important only in the atmosphere.[3] The helioseismic waves are generated by the turbulence in the convection zone immediately beneath the Sun's surface.[4] Certain frequencies are amplified by constructive interference, leading to resonance. In other words, the turbulence "rings" the sun like a bell. The resonant waves are reflected near the photosphere, the visible surface of the sun, where they can be observed. The oscillations are detectable in almost any time series of solar images, but are best observed by measuring the Doppler shift of atmospheric absorption lines. Details of the propagation of the seismic waves through the Sun, inferred from the resonant frequencies, reveal the Sun's inner structure, allowing astrophysicists to develop an extremely detailed representation of the hydrostatic stratification[5] and the internal angular velocity.[6][7] That has permitted the evaluation of the quadrupole moment,[6] , and higher-order moments [8] of the Sun's external gravitational potential. It is a more accurate and more robust procedure than trying to infer it from the oblateness of the visible disc.[9][10] Together with measurements of the orbits of Mercury and of spacecraft, the result is consistent with General Relativity.[11]

Helioseismology has been able to rule out the possibility that the solar neutrino problem was a result of incorrect static models of the interior of the Sun.[12] [13] [14] Features revealed by helioseismology include that the outer convective zone and the inner radiative zone rotate differently, which is thought by some to generate the main magnetic field at least in the outer layers of the Sun by a dynamo effect.[15][16] Broadly speaking, the angular velocity of the convection zone decreases from equator to the poles, varying only weakly with depth; the radiative envelope beneath rotates almost uniformly. These two regions are separated by a shear layer called the tachocline,[17][18] which is too thin to be resolved directly by seismological analysis alone. The convective zone has "jet streams" of plasma (called torsional oscillations) thousands of kilometers below the surface.[19] The jet streams form broad fronts at the equator, breaking into smaller cyclonic storms at high latitudes. Torsional oscillations are the time variation in solar differential rotation. They are alternating bands of faster and slower rotation. So far there is no generally accepted theoretical explanation for them, even though a close relation to the solar cycle is evident, as they have a period of eleven years, as was known since they were first observed in 1980.[20]

Helioseismology can also be used to image the far side of the Sun from the Earth,[21] including sunspots. In simple terms, sunspots both absorb and deflect helioseismic waves, causing a seismic deficit where next they encounter the photosphere.[22] To facilitate spaceweather forecasting, seismic images of the central portion of the solar far side have been produced nearly continuously since late 2000 by analysing data from the SOHO spacecraft, and since 2001 the entire far side has been imaged with these data.

Types of solar oscillation

Low-resolution solar oscillation spectrum taken by the GOLF instrument between 19 February and 25 March 1996. The horizontal axis is frequency in millihertz, or thousandths of a hertz (mHz); the vertical axis is power density. The "5-minute oscillation" is the series of p-mode lines on the right between about 2 and 7 mHz.

Individual oscillations in the Sun are damped; in the absence of continual excitation they would die out in a few days. Resonating interference between propagating waves produces global standing waves, known also as normal modes. Analysis of these modes constitutes the discipline of global helioseismology.

Solar oscillation modes are divided up into three basic categories, according to their dominant restoring force: pressure dominates in p modes, and buoyancy in gravity modes, both internal (g modes) and surface (f modes):

Analysis of oscillation data

Power spectrum of medium angular degree () solar oscillations, computed for 144 days of data from the MDI instrument aboard SOHO.[31] The colour scale is logarithmic and saturated at one hundredth the maximum power in the signal, to make the modes more visible. The low-frequency region is dominated by the signal of granulation. As the angular degree increases, the individual mode frequencies converge onto clear ridges, each corresponding to a sequence of low-order modes.

Helioseismic waves are of very low amplitude, and can be described as a superposition of solutions of the linearized wave equation. Because the Sun is very nearly spherical, the spatial structure of those solutions can be represented, with respect to spherical polar coordinates , as products of orthonormal surface harmonics, of and , and an amplitude function of . It is usual to adopt as a basis for the surface harmonics a product of exp(i ) and the associated Legendre function of cos of degree and (azimuthal) order . Globally, the background structure hardly changes over an oscillation period, so the temporal variation is simply a multiplicative sinusoidal function of , whose frequencies are a sequence of eigenvalues of the wave equation, and are labeled by the order . The degree is the total number of nodal circles on a surface of constant , and the azimuthal order is the number of complete nodal circles crossing the equator; by convention the order is zero for f modes, and counts upwards/downwards for p/g modes according roughly to the number of radial nodes in the eigenfunction; frequency is a strictly increasing function of at constant and . An example of such a mode is illustrated at the top right of this article.

The data from time-series of solar spectra contain all the oscillations overlapping. Thousands of modes have been detected (with the true number being in the millions). The mathematical technique of Fourier analysis is used to recover information about individual modes from this mass of data. The idea is that any bounded function in a bounded domain can be written as a weighted sum of orthogonal harmonic functions (the basis functions), which in one dimension are the simplest periodic functions, namely sines and cosines (with different frequencies). To determine how much (the amplitude) of each basis function contributes to , one applies the Fourier transform: essentially the projection (functional scalar product) of onto the basis functions over the domain, although in practice the technique of accomplishing that task is more sophisticated, and faster, than carrying out the projections explicitly.

Note that if the Sun were spherically symmetric, the eigenfrequencies would be degenerate with respect to the azimuthal order , because all chosen spherical polar coordinate systems would be indistinguishable. The Sun's rotation creates an equatorial bulge, which, along with other aspherical perturbations such as sunspots, break that symmetry, and lift the degeneracy. Therefore, in general the frequencies of stellar oscillations depend on all three quantum numbers , and . It is convenient to separate the frequency into the multiplet frequency , the uniformly weighted average over , corresponding to the spherically symmetric structure of the star, and the frequency splitting , which is determined by the asphericity.

Analyses of oscillation data are aimed at separating these different frequency components. In the case of the Sun the oscillations can be observed directly as functions of position on the solar disc as well as time. Projection onto the spatial eigenfunctions goes some way towards isolating and , although the outcome contains contributions from many other harmonics, partly because in practice only about one-third of the full surface area of the Sun can usefully be measured. The average over the stellar surface implicit in observations of stellar oscillations can be thought of as an example of such spatial filtering, just as are the full-disc solar observations by BiSON and GOLF. Each projection is followed by a Fourier transform in time, from which, with adequate resolution, the frequencies of the modes can be determined.

Note that the oscillation data, rather than being continuous functions, are actually discrete samples in space and time, and are subject to observational error. When computing transforms, interpolation is implied, a process which inevitably introduces further errors.

This discussion is adapted from the Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard lecture notes on stellar oscillations.[32]

Inversion

Internal rotation in the Sun, showing differential rotation in the outer convective region and almost uniform rotation in the central radiative region. The transition between these regions is called the tachocline.

Information about helioseismic waves (such as mode frequencies and frequency-splitting) collected by transforming the oscillation data can be used to infer numerical details of internal features of the Sun such as the internal sound speed and the internal differential rotation. Equations and analytic relations such as integrals can be manipulated to relate the desired internal properties to the transformed data. The numerical methods used are adapted to the particular internal features examined so as to extract the maximum amount of information, with the least error, from the oscillations about the internal features. This process is termed helioseismic inversion.

As an example in slightly more detail, the oscillation frequency splitting can be related, via an integral, to the angular velocity within the sun.[32]

Internal structure

Helioseismic observations reveal the inner uniformly rotating zone and the differentially rotating envelope of the Sun, roughly corresponding to the radiation and convection zones, respectively.[15] See the diagram on the right. The transition layer is called the tachocline.

Helioseismic dating

The age of the sun can be inferred with helioseismic studies.[33] [34] [35] [36] This is because the propagation of acoustic waves deep within the sun depends on the composition of the sun, in particular the relative abundance of helium and hydrogen in the core. Since the sun has been fusing hydrogen into helium throughout its lifetime, the present day abundance of helium in the core can be used to infer the age of the sun, using numerical models of stellar evolution applied to the Sun (standard solar model). This method provides verification of the age of the solar system gathered from the radiometric dating of meteorites.[37]

Local helioseismology

The goal of local helioseismology, a term first used in 1993,[38] is to interpret the full wave field observed at the surface, not just the mode (more precisely, eigenmode) frequencies. Another way to look at it, is that global helioseismology studies standing waves of the entire Sun and local helioseismology studies propagating waves in parts of the Sun. A variety of solar phenomena are being studied, including sunspots, plage, supergranulation, giant cell convection, magnetically active region evolution, meridional circulation, and solar rotation.[39] Local helioseismology provides a three-dimensional view of the solar interior, which is important to understand large-scale flows, magnetic structures, and their interactions in the solar interior.

There are many techniques used in this new and expanding field, which include:

This section is adapted from Laurent Gizon and Aaron C. Birch, "Local Helioseismology", Living Rev. Solar Phys. 2, (2005), 6. online article (cited on November 22, 2009).

Jet stream movement may affect solar cycle

An internal jet stream moving behind schedule may explain the delayed start to the solar cycle in 2009.[49]

See also

References

  1. Deubner, F.L.; Gough, D.O. (1984). "Helioseismology: Oscillations as a Diagnostic of the Solar Interior". Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics. 22: 593–619. Bibcode:1984ARA&A..22..593D. doi:10.1146/annurev.aa.22.090184.003113.
  2. Gough, D.O. (1985). "Beginnings of asteroseismology". Nature. 314: 14–15. Bibcode:1985Natur.314...14G. doi:10.1038/314014a0.
  3. Campbell, W.R.; Roberts, B. (March 1989). "The influence of a chromospheric magnetic field on the solar p- and f-modes". Astrophysical Journal. 338: 538–556. Bibcode:1989ApJ...338..538C. doi:10.1086/167216.
  4. Goldreich, P.; Keeley, D.A. (February 1977). "Solar seismology. II - The stochastic excitation of the solar p-modes by turbulent convection". Astrophysical Journal. 212: 243–251. Bibcode:1977ApJ...212..243G. doi:10.1086/155043.
  5. ChristensenDalsgaard, J.; Duvall Jr., T.L.; Gough, D.O.; Harvey, J.W.; Rhodes Jr, E.J. (May 1985). "Speed of sound in the solar interior". Nature. 315: 378–382. Bibcode:1985Natur.315..378C. doi:10.1038/315378a0.
  6. 1 2 Duvall Jr., T.L.; Dziembowski, W.A.; Goode, P.R.; Gough, D.O.; Harvey, J.W.; Leibacher, J.W. (July 1984). "Internal rotation of the sun". Nature. 310: 22–25. Bibcode:1984Natur.310...22D. doi:10.1038/310022a0.
  7. Schou, J.; Antia, H.M.; Basu, S.; Bogart, R.S.; Bush, R.I.; Chitre, S.M.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.; De Mauro, M.P.; Dziembowski, W.A.; Eff Darwich, A.; Gough, D.O.; Haber, D.A.; Hoeksema, J.T.; Howe, R.; Korzennik, S.G.; Kosovichev, A.G.; Larsen, R.M.; Pijpers, F.P.; Scherrer, P.H.; Sekii, T.; Tarbell, T.D.; Title, A.M.; Thompson, M.J.; Toomre, J. (September 1998). "Helioseismic Studies of Differential Rotation in the Solar Envelope by the Solar Oscillations Investigation Using the Michelson Doppler Imager". Astrophysical Journal. 505: 390–417. Bibcode:1998ApJ...505..390S. doi:10.1086/306146.
  8. Antia, H.M.; Chitre, S.M.; Gough, D.O. (January 2008). "Temporal variations in the Sun's rotational kinetic energy". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 477: 657–663. Bibcode:2008A&A...477..657A. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20078209.
  9. Fivian, M.D.; Hudson, H.S.; Lin, R.P.; Zahid, H.J. (October 2008). "A Large Excess in Apparent Solar Oblateness Due to Surface Magnetism". Science. 322: 560–562. Bibcode:2008Sci...322..560F. doi:10.1126/science.1160863.
  10. Kuhn, J.R.; Bush, R.; Emilio, M.; Scholl, I.F. (September 2012). "The Precise Solar Shape and Its Variability". Science. 337: 1638–1640. Bibcode:2012Sci...337.1638K. doi:10.1126/science.1223231.
  11. Shapiro, I.T.; Counselman III, C.C.; King, R.W. (March 1976). "Verification of the principle of equivalence for massive bodies". Physical Review Letters. 36: 555–558. Bibcode:1976PhRvL..36..555S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.36.555.
  12. Gough, D.O. (1991). "Seismic constraints on the solar neutrino problem". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 647: 199–217. Bibcode:1991NYASA.647..199G. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1991.tb32171.x.
  13. Bahcall, J.N.; Pinsonneault, M.H.; Basu, S.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J. (January 1997). "Are Standard Solar Models Reliable?". Physical Review Letters. 78 (2): 171–174. Bibcode:1997PhRvL..78..171B. arXiv:astro-ph/9610250Freely accessible. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.78.171.
  14. Gough, D.O. (May 1999). "Helioseismology and solar neutrinos". Nuclear Physics B Proc. Suppl. 77: 81–88. Bibcode:1999NuPhS..77...81G. doi:10.1016/S0920-5632(99)00401-6.
  15. 1 2 Thompson, M.J.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.; Miesch, M.S.; Toomre, J. (2003). "The Internal Rotation of the Sun". Annual Review of Astronomy & Astrophysics. 41 (1): 599–643. Bibcode:2003ARA&A..41..599T. doi:10.1146/annurev.astro.41.011802.094848.
  16. Ossendrijver, M. (2003). "The solar dynamo". The Astronomy and Astrophysics Review. 11 (4): 287–367. Bibcode:2003A&ARv..11..287O. doi:10.1007/s00159-003-0019-3.
  17. Spiegel, E.A.; Zahn, J.-P. (November 1992). "The solar tachocline". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 265: 106–114. Bibcode:1992A&A...265..106S.
  18. Gough, D.O.; McIntyre, M.E. (August 1998). "Inevitability of a magnetic field in the Sun's radiative interior". Nature. 394: 755–757. Bibcode:1998Natur.394..755G. doi:10.1038/29472.
  19. Vorontsov, S.V.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.; Schou, J.; Strakhov, V.N.; Thompson, M.J. (April 2002). "Helioseismic Measurement of Solar Torsional Oscillations". Science. 296 (5565): 101–103. Bibcode:2002Sci...296..101V. PMID 11935019. doi:10.1126/science.1069190.
  20. Howard, R.; Labonte, B.J. (July 1980). "The sun is observed to be a torsional oscillator with a period of 11 years". Astrophysical Journal. 239: L33–L36. Bibcode:1980ApJ...239L..33H. doi:10.1086/183286.
  21. 1 2 Braun, D.C.; Lindsey, C. (October 2001). "Seismic Imaging of the Far Hemisphere of the Sun". The Astrophysical Journal. 560 (2): L189–L192. Bibcode:2001ApJ...560L.189B. doi:10.1086/324323.
  22. Lindsey, C.; Braun, D.C. (March 1990). "Helioseismic imaging of sunspots at their antipodes". Solar Physics. 126 (1): 101–115. Bibcode:1990SoPh..126..101L. doi:10.1007/BF00158301.
  23. Rabello-Soares, M.C.; Korzennik, S.G.; Schou, J. (January 2001). "The determination of MDI high-degree mode frequencies". In: Proceedings of the SOHO 10/GONG 2000 Workshop: Helio- and asteroseismology at the dawn of the millennium. ESA Special Publication. 464: 129–136. Bibcode:2001ESASP.464..129R.
  24. Elsworth, Y.P; Howe, R.; Isaak, G.R.; McLeod, C,P.; New, R. (July 1991). "Low-l p-mode solar eigenfrequency measurements from the Birmingham Network". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 251: 7P–9P. Bibcode:1991MNRAS.251P...7E. doi:10.1093/mnras/251.1.7P.
  25. Garcia, R.A.; Regulo, C.; Turck-Chieze, S.; Bertello, L.; Kosovichev, A.G.; Brun, A.S.; Couvidat, S.; Henney, C.J.; Lazrek, M.; Ulrich, R.K.; Varadi, F. (May 2001). "Low-Degree Low-Order Solar p Modes As Seen By GOLF On board SOHO". Solar Physics. 20: 361–379. Bibcode:2001SoPh..200..361G. doi:10.1023/A:1010344721148.
  26. http://www.springerlink.com/content/xt03jqk462770337/
  27. Garcia, R.A.; Turck-Chieze, S.; Jimenez-Reyes, S.J.; Ballot, J.; Palle, P.L.; Eff-Darwich, A.; Mathur, S.; Provost, J. (June 2007). "Tracking Solar Gravity Modes: The Dynamics of the Solar Core". Science. 316 (5831): 1591–. Bibcode:2007Sci...316.1591G. PMID 17478682. doi:10.1126/science.1140598.
  28. Appourchaux, T.; Belkacem, K.; Broomhall, A. M.; Chaplin, W. J.; Gough, D. O.; Houdek, G.; Provost, J.; Baudin, F.; Boumier, P.; Elsworth, Y.; García, R. A.; Andersen, B.; Finsterle, W.; Fröhlich, C.; Gabriel, A.; Grec, G.; Jiménez, A.; Kosovichev, A.; Sekii, T.; Toutain, T.; Turck-Chièze, S. (October 2009). "The quest for the solar g modes". The Astronomy and Astrophysics Review. 0910: 848. Bibcode:2010A&ARv..18..197A. arXiv:0910.0848Freely accessible [astro-ph.SR]. doi:10.1007/s00159-009-0027-z.
  29. Gough, D.O. (1993). "Linear adiabatic stellar pulsation". Astrophysical fluid dynamics, (ed. J-P. Zahn & J. Zinn-Justin, North-Holland, Amsterdam). Les Houches Session XLVII: 399–560. Bibcode:1993afd..conf..399G.
  30. Corbard, T.; Thompson, M.J. (February 2002). "The subsurface radial gradient of solar angular velocity from MDI f-mode observations". Solar Physics. 205 (2): 211–229. Bibcode:2002SoPh..205..211C. arXiv:astro-ph/0110361Freely accessible. doi:10.1023/A:1014224523374.
  31. Rhodes, Jr. E. J.; Kosovichev, A. G.; Schou, J.; et al. (1997), "Measurements of Frequencies of Solar Oscillations from the MDI Medium-l Program", Solar Physics, 175: 287, Bibcode:1997SoPh..175..287R
  32. 1 2 Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., 2003, Lecture Notes on Stellar Oscillations. Fifth Edition, lecture notes, University of Aarhus. Retrieved November 2009.
  33. Dziembowski, W.; Fiorentini, G.; Ricci, B.; Sienkiewicz, R. (1999). "Helioseismology and the solar age". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 343: 990–996. Bibcode:1999A&A...343..990D. arXiv:astro-ph/9809361Freely accessible.
  34. Gough, D. (2001). T.von Hippel, C. Simpson and N.Manset, ed. "Lessons Learned From Solar Oscillations". Astrophysical Ages and Times Scales. Ast. Soc. Pacific Conf. Ser. 245: 31–43. Bibcode:2001ASPC..245...31G.
  35. Bonanno, A.; Schlattl, H.; Paternò, L. (2002). "The age of the Sun and the relativistic corrections in the EOS". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 390 (3): 1115–1118. Bibcode:2002A&A...390.1115B. arXiv:astro-ph/0204331Freely accessible. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20020749.
  36. Houdek, G.; Gough, D. (2011). "On the seismic age and heavy-element abundance of the Sun". Mon. Not. R. Ast. Soc. 418: 1217–1230. Bibcode:2011MNRAS.418.1217H. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19572.x.
  37. Guenther, D.B. (April 1989). "Age of the sun". Astrophysical Journal. 339: 1156–1159. Bibcode:1989ApJ...339.1156G. doi:10.1086/167370.
  38. Lindsey, C.; Braun, D.C.; Jefferies, S.M. (January 1993). T.M. Brown, ed. ""Local Helioseismology of Subsurface Structure" in "GONG 1992. Seismic Investigation of the Sun and Stars"". GONG 1992. Seismic Investigation of the Sun and Stars. Proceedings of a Conference held in Boulder. Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series. 42: 81–84. Bibcode:1993ASPC...42...81L. ISBN 0-937707-61-9.
  39. Duvall, Jr.; T.L. (1998). S. Korzennik, ed. ""Recent Results and Theoretical Advances in Local Helioseismology" in "Structure and Dynamics of the Interior of the Sun and Sun-like Stars"". Structure and Dynamics of the Interior of the Sun and Sun-like Stars SOHO 6/GONG 98 Workshop Abstract. ESA Special Publication. 418: 581–585. Bibcode:1998ESASP.418..581D.
  40. Braun, D.C.; Duvall, Jr., T.L.; Labonte, B.J. (August 1987). "Acoustic absorption by sunspots". Astrophysical Journal. 319: L27–L31. Bibcode:1987ApJ...319L..27B. doi:10.1086/184949.
  41. Hill, F. (October 1988). "Rings and trumpets - Three-dimensional power spectra of solar oscillations". Astrophysical Journal. 333: 996–1013. Bibcode:1988ApJ...333..996H. doi:10.1086/166807.
  42. Basu, S.; Antia, H.M.; Bogart, R.S. (August 2004). "Ring-Diagram Analysis of the Structure of Solar Active Regions". The Astrophysical Journal. 610 (2): 1157–1168. Bibcode:2004ApJ...610.1157B. doi:10.1086/421843.
  43. Duvall, Jr., T.L.; Jefferies, S.M.; Harvey, J.W.; Pomerantz, M.A. (April 1993). "Time-distance helioseismology". Nature. 362 (6419): 430–432. Bibcode:1993Natur.362..430D. doi:10.1038/362430a0.
  44. Jensen, J.M., 2003, Time-distance: what does it tell us?, in Local and Global Helioseismology: The Present and Future, (Ed.) Sawaya-Lacoste, H., Proceedings of SOHO 12/GONG+ 2002, 27 October - 1 November 2002, Big Bear Lake, California, U.S.A., vol. SP-517 of ESA Conference Proceedings, pp. 61–70, ESA Publications Division, Noordwijk
  45. Donea, A.-C.; Braun, D.C.; Lindsey, C. (March 1999). "Seismic Images of a Solar Flare". The Astrophysical Journal. 513 (2): L143–L146. Bibcode:1999ApJ...513L.143D. doi:10.1086/311915.
  46. Braun, D.C.; Fan, Y. (November 1998). "Helioseismic Measurements of the Subsurface Meridional Flow". The Astrophysical Journal. 508 (1): L105–L108. Bibcode:1998ApJ...508L.105B. doi:10.1086/311727.
  47. Braun, D.C.; Lindsey, C. (March 1999). "Helioseismic Images of an Active Region Complex". The Astrophysical Journal. 513 (1): L79–L82. Bibcode:1999ApJ...513L..79B. doi:10.1086/311897.
  48. 1 2 Woodard, M.F. (January 2002). "Solar Subsurface Flow Inferred Directly from Frequency-Wavenumber Correlations in the Seismic Velocity Field". The Astrophysical Journal. 565 (1): 634–639. Bibcode:2002ApJ...565..634W. doi:10.1086/324546.
  49. Minard, Anne. "The Case of the Missing Sunspots: Solved?". Universe Today.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Helioseismology.

Satellite instruments

Ground-based instruments

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.