- Helioseismology
Helioseismology is the study of the propagation of
pressure wave s in theSun . Unlike seismic waves on earth, solar waves have practically no shear component (s-waves). Solar pressure waves are generated by the turbulence in the convection zone, near the surface of the sun, and certain frequencies are amplified by constructive interference. In other words, the turbulence "rings" the sun like a bell. The acoustic waves are transmitted to the outer photosphere of the sun, which is where the light emitted by the sun is generated. The acoustic oscillations are detectable on almost any time series of solar images, but are best observed by measuring thedoppler shift of photospheric absorption lines. Changes in the propagation of pressure waves through the Sun reveal inner structures and allowsastrophysicist s to develop extremely detailed profiles of the interior conditions of the Sun.Helioseismology was able to rule out the possibility that the
solar neutrino problem was due to incorrect models of the interior of the Sun. Features revealed by helioseismology include that the outer convective zone and the inner radiative zone rotate at different speeds to generate the main magnetic field of the Sun, and that the convective zone has "jet stream s" of plasma thousands of kilometers below the surface. These jet streams form broad fronts at the equator, breaking into smaller cyclonic storms at high latitudes.Helioseismology can also be used to detect
sunspot s on the far side of the Sun from Earth.Keep in mind that despite the name, helioseismology is the study of solar pressure waves and not solar seismic activity - there is no such thing. The name is derived from the similar practice of studying terrestrial seismic waves to determine the composition of the
Earth 's interior. The science can be compared toasteroseismology , which considers the propagation of sound waves in stars.Types of solar oscillations
Solar oscillations are essentially divided up into three categories, based on the restoring force that drives them: acoustic, gravity, and surface-gravity wave modes.
* p-mode or acoustic waves have pressure as their restoring force, hence the name "p-mode". Their dynamics are determined by the variation of the speed of sound inside the sun. p-mode oscillations have frequencies > 1 mHz and are very strong in the 2-4 mHz range, where they are often referred to as "5-minute oscillations". (Note: 5 minutes per cycle is 1/300 cycles per second = 3.33 mHz.) P-modes at the solar surface have amplitudes of hundreds of
kilometers and are readily detectable with Doppler imaging or sensitivespectral line intensity imaging.* g-mode or gravity waves are density waves which have gravity (negative buoyancy of displaced material) as their restoring force, hence the name "g-mode". The g-mode oscillations are low frequency waves (0-0.4 mHz). They are confined to the interior of the sun below the convection zone (which extends from 0.7-1.0 solar radius), and are practically inobservable at the surface. The restoring force is caused by adiabatic expansion: in the deep interior of the Sun, the
temperature gradient is weak, and a small packet of gas that moves (for example) upward will be cooler and denser than the surrounding gas, and will therefore be pulled back to its original position; this restoring force drives g-modes. In the solar convection zone, the temperature gradient is slightly greater than theadiabatic lapse rate , so that there is an anti-restoring force (that drivesconvection ) and g-modes cannot propagate. The g modes are evanescent through the entire convection zone, and are thought to have residual amplitudes of onlymillimeter s at the photosphere. Since the '80s, there have been several claims of g-mode detection, none of which have been confirmed. In 2007, another g-mode detection was claimed using the GOLF data [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/316/5825/673] [http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMOZPU681F_index_0.html] . At the GONG2008 / SOHO XXI conference held in Boulder, the Phoebus group reported that it could not confirm these findings, putting an upper limit on the g-mode amplitude to 3 mm/s, right at the detection limit of the GOLF instrument.* f-mode or surface gravity waves are also gravity waves, but occur at or near the photosphere, where the temperature gradient again drops below the adiabatic lapse rate.
Helioseismic dating
The age of the sun can be inferred with helioseismic studies. This method provides verification of the age of the solar system gathered from the radiometric dating of meteorites.cite journal
author = A. Bonanno, H. Schlattl, L. Paternò
title = The age of the Sun and the relativistic corrections in the EOS
journal = Astronomy and Astrophysics
year = 2002
url=http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2002A%26A...390.1115B | volume = 390
pages = 1115
doi = 10.1051/0004-6361:20020749]Internal structure
Helioseismic observations revealed the inner uniformly-rotating zone and the differentially-rotating envelope of the Sun, roughly corresponding to the radiation and convection zones, respectively. The transition layer is called the
tachocline .References
External links
* [http://whome.phys.au.dk/~jcd/oscilnotes/index.html Lecture Notes on Stellar Oscillations] by Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard
** [http://bigcat.phys.au.dk/helio_outreach/english/ Non-technical description of helio- and asteroseismology]
* Laurent Gizon and Aaron C. Birch, "Local Helioseismology", Living Rev. Solar Phys. 2 (2005) 6 [http://www.livingreviews.org/lrsp-2005-6 online article]
* [http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=105844&org=olpa&from=news Scientists Issue Unprecedented Forecast of Next Sunspot Cycle] National Science Foundation press release, March 6, 2006
* [http://solarphysics.livingreviews.org/open?pubNo=lrsp-2005-1 Large-Scale Dynamics of the Convection Zone and Tachocline] by Mark S. Miesch
* [http://www.helas-eu.org/ European Helio- and Asteroseismology Network (HELAS)]atellite instruments
* [http://www.ias.u-psud.fr/virgo VIRGO]
* [http://soi.stanford.edu SOI/MDI]
* [http://sunland.gsfc.nasa.gov/smex/trace/ TRACE]Ground-based instruments
* [http://bison.ph.bham.ac.uk/ BiSON]
*Mark-1
* [http://gong.nso.edu/ GONG]
* [http://physics.usc.edu/solar HiDHN]ee also
*
Asteroseismology
*List of ologies
*Magneto-gravity
*Proton-proton chain
*Solar neutrino problem
*Solar tower
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