seismology_overview
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===== Seismology of the Sun, Stars, and Giant Planets ===== | ===== Seismology of the Sun, Stars, and Giant Planets ===== | ||
+ | ==== Helioseismology ==== | ||
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This can be achieved by measuring the large-scale plasma flows throughout the entire solar convection zone with unprecedented accuracy using local helioseismology. The role of rotation and interior flows such as the meridional circulation in driving the solar cycle is unquestioned. Key characteristics of the flows are still largely uncertain, such as their depth dependence, strength, and time variation. Yet, as ingredients to dynamo models of solar magnetic fields, such quantities are critically needed. On the left is a recently obtained insight into what the meridional flows structure may look like, adapted from {[2013ApJ...774L..29Z]}. Our research attempts to determine this information. | This can be achieved by measuring the large-scale plasma flows throughout the entire solar convection zone with unprecedented accuracy using local helioseismology. The role of rotation and interior flows such as the meridional circulation in driving the solar cycle is unquestioned. Key characteristics of the flows are still largely uncertain, such as their depth dependence, strength, and time variation. Yet, as ingredients to dynamo models of solar magnetic fields, such quantities are critically needed. On the left is a recently obtained insight into what the meridional flows structure may look like, adapted from {[2013ApJ...774L..29Z]}. Our research attempts to determine this information. | ||
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+ | ==== Asteroseismology ==== | ||
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+ | We focus on stars that pulsate like our Sun in what follows, both for simplicity and because the interpretation of the data is much more advanced than for other types of pulsators. Such solar-like oscillators need not be solar-type, main-sequence stars at all; for example, almost all red giants, such as the bright Aldebaran {[farr2018]}, | ||
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+ | The oscillations are global modes in a star, which distort the stellar surface with a spatial pattern that can usually be described by spherical harmonics, resulting in luminosity and radial-velocity variations. The figure shows 4 examples, where the red and blue denote the (highly exaggerated) distortion of the particular part of the surface, and white are nodes (no distortion). Cancellation effects due to the point-source nature of distant stars only allow for observations of the lowest spherical harmonic degrees (L=0 - 3). In the figure, the top 2 animations are for L=1 and L=3, which would be observable. The other two (L=6 and L=10, would not be). Power spectra of a time series of a solar-like oscillator show a comb-like structure of peaks within a broad acoustic mode envelope that has a maximum amplitude at some temporal frequency. This can range from about 20 μHz (half a day period) for evolved giants to a few thousand μHz (periods of minutes) for dwarfs. | ||
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+ | These observed modal properties are often interpreted in terms of the asymptotic theory of stellar oscillations {[tassoul1980]}. In this case, the large frequency spacing is related to the sound crossing time of an acoustic wave across the star, and therefore scales with the mean density. An empirically-motivated relationship connects the frequenc of maximum power with the surface gravity and effective temperature {[brown1991]}. When these two relations are combined, scaling relations for a star's mass and radius can be derived {[kjeldsen1995]} | ||
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+ | Other types of modes provide even more powerful diagnostics of interior conditions. In subsurface convectively-stable regions of stars, such as the cores of red giants, low-frequency gravity modes are excited. While they are not visible at the surface, they can interact and `mix' with acoustic modes and impart new information in the power spectrum. New frequency spacings appear, which can be used as diganostics of the core region, capable of providing the evolutionary state or inferring the core rotation rate. | ||
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+ | All of the above may be considered as a broad application of asteroseismic analysis of global observables. Some high-precision observations, | ||
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+ | ==== Giant-Planet Seismology ==== | ||
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+ | A detailed discussion about this topic can be found on the [[jive_in_nm|JIVE]] page. | ||
===== References ===== | ===== References ===== |
seismology_overview.1720817216.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/07/12 20:46 by jasonj