4.7 Article

SUPERGRANULES AS PROBES OF THE SUN'S MERIDIONAL CIRCULATION

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 760, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/760/1/84

Keywords

convection; Sun: rotation

Funding

  1. Heliophysics Causes and Consequences of the Minimum of Solar Cycle 23/24 Program
  2. Living With a Star Program to NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

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Recent analysis revealed that supergranules (convection cells seen at the Sun's surface) are advected by the zonal flows at depths equal to the widths of the cells themselves. Here we probe the structure of the meridional circulation by cross-correlating maps of the Doppler velocity signal using a series of successively longer time lags between maps. We find that the poleward meridional flow decreases in amplitude with time lag and reverses direction to become an equatorward return flow at time lags >24 hr. These cross-correlation results are dominated by larger and deeper cells at longer time lags. (The smaller cells have shorter lifetimes and do not contribute to the correlated signal at longer time lags.) We determine the characteristic cell size associated with each time lag by comparing the equatorial zonal flows measured at different time lags with the zonal flows associated with different cell sizes from a Fourier analysis. This association gives a characteristic cell size of similar to 50 Mm at a 24 hr time lag. This indicates that the poleward meridional flow returns equatorward at depths >50 Mm-just below the base of the surface shear layer. A substantial and highly significant equatorward flow (4.6 +/- 0.4 m s(-1)) is found at a time lag of 28 hr corresponding to a depth of similar to 70 Mm. This represents one of the first positive detections of the Sun's meridional return flow and illustrates the power of using supergranules to probe the Sun's internal dynamics.

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