4.6 Article

Solar inertial modes: Observations, identification, and diagnostic promise

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 652, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202141462

Keywords

Sun: rotation; Sun: oscillations; Sun: interior; Sun: helioseismology; Sun: general

Funding

  1. NASA - Stanford University [NAS5-02139]
  2. Japan Student Services Organization (JASSO)
  3. ERC Synergy Grant WHOLE SUN [810218]
  4. NYUAD Institute Grant [G1502]
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [SFB 1456/432680300]
  6. Mathematics of Experiment, [C04]
  7. German Data Center for SDO through German Aerospace Center (DLR) [50OL1701]
  8. DLR under PLATO Data Center grant [50OO1501]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study reports observations of the Sun's toroidal modes, with comparisons made to normal modes of a differentially rotating spherical shell to identify high-latitude inertial modes, critical-latitude inertial modes, and equatorial Rossby modes. The high-latitude and critical-latitude modes exhibit maximum kinetic energy density at the base of the convection zone, with the high-latitude modes being baroclinically unstable due to the latitudinal entropy gradient.
The oscillations of a slowly rotating star have long been classified into spheroidal and toroidal modes. The spheroidal modes include the well-known 5-min acoustic modes used in helioseismology. Here we report observations of the Sun's toroidal modes, for which the restoring force is the Coriolis force and whose periods are on the order of the solar rotation period. By comparing the observations with the normal modes of a differentially rotating spherical shell, we are able to identify many of the observed modes. These are the high-latitude inertial modes, the critical-latitude inertial modes, and the equatorial Rossby modes. In the model, the high-latitude and critical-latitude modes have maximum kinetic energy density at the base of the convection zone, and the high-latitude modes are baroclinically unstable due to the latitudinal entropy gradient. As a first application of inertial-mode helioseismology, we constrain the superadiabaticity and the turbulent viscosity in the deep convection zone.

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