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Rachel Howe.  Rotation profile  Rotation changes over the solar cycle  The torsional oscillation  Tachocline fluctuations  Frequency and parameter.

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Presentation on theme: "Rachel Howe.  Rotation profile  Rotation changes over the solar cycle  The torsional oscillation  Tachocline fluctuations  Frequency and parameter."— Presentation transcript:

1 Rachel Howe

2  Rotation profile  Rotation changes over the solar cycle  The torsional oscillation  Tachocline fluctuations  Frequency and parameter changes  Global frequency shifts  Local frequency shifts  Looking for interior changes

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6  So-called ‘torsional oscillation’ is a pattern of weak slower and faster zonal flows migrating from mid- latitudes to the equator and poles over the solar cycle.  First observed by Howard and Labonte (1980) in surface observations  Surface Doppler measurements from Mt Wilson go back to 1986. (Ulrich 2001).

7  Woodard and Libbrecht (1993) saw hints in BBSO data.  Seen in early MDI f- mode data by Kosovichev & Schou (1997)

8  Seen in 4 years of GONG and 3 years of MDI data by Toomre et al. (2000), Howe, Komm & Hill (2000), Howe et al. (2000)  Penetration depth at least 0.92 R.

9  Antia and Basu (2001) drew attention to high- latitude, poleward-moving part of phenomenon.

10  Vorontsov et al (2003) showed that the phenomenon involves much of convection zone, and analyzed the signal in terms of 11- year sinusoidal variations.

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12 MDI OLA MDI RLS GONG RLS 0 1530 4560 Howe et al 2005

13  We now have a full 11yr cycle of observations!  Animation based on 11+11/2 year sinusoids.

14 MDI LOCAL MDI GLOBAL DOPPLER Howe et al, 2006

15 Howe et al. 2009

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19  Torsional oscillation pattern involves most of convection zone  Related to timing of solar cycle  Strength may not be related to cycle strength  High-latitude flows show this cycle is not like the last one (or maybe the one before that.)

20 See Howe et al. (2000; Science 287, 2456)

21 Basu & Antia (2001; MNRAS 324, 498)

22 A. 0.71, eq. residuals B. Power spectrum C. Power in max. power frequency bin, vs latitude D. Power in max. power frequency bin, vs radius.

23  Rule 1: Everything varies with everything else  Rule 2: It’s always more complicated  Well established that p-mode frequency increases with solar activity  Response to activity increases with activity (until it starts decreasing again.)

24  From Libbrecht, 1988.  Amplitude peaks, linewidth has plateau around 3mHz.

25  Differences from model are tiny.  Anomaly at base of convection zone – heavy element settling?  But things look worse with more recent opacity values.

26  ACRIM (Woodard & Noyes 1985, 1988, Gelly, Fossat & Grec 1988)  BiSON, Mark I (Palle et al. 1989, Elsworth et al. 1990) Chaplin et al. 2007

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28 Slight systematic shift between MDI and GONG

29 Howe et al. 2002

30 (Antia et al 2001, Howe et al 2002)

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32 (Howe, Komm & Hill 2002)

33  Mode frequencies are higher in active regions  (Hindman et al, 2000).  Also, amplitude decreases and linewidth increases.

34  Method- dependent  Also depends on position on disk (or detector)

35  Sound speed and flow patterns below a sunspot

36  Bogart et al. 2008, Sol. Phys.

37  Komm, Howe and Hill 2002

38  Frequency shifts correlate with surface flux in time and space, at a wide range of scales  BUT remember Rule 2: It’s always more complicated  Is there interesting information in the deviations from the trends?

39 From Tripathy et al., 2007 Solar Phys. 243, 105

40 Broomhall et al. 2011

41  Frequency shifts are strongly correlated with surface activity, but such changes are mostly shallow.  Finding subsurface changes in structure (sound speed/density) requires careful removal of surface effects

42  Lefebvre & Kosovichev 2005, Lefebvre, Kosovochev & Rozelot 2007 – radius change in shallow subsurface layers. Fig. 1.- Radial variation as a function of the fractional radius, obtained as a solution of the inversion of f-mode frequencies by a least-squares regularization technique. The reference year is 1996. The error bars are the standard deviation after averaging over a set of random noise added to the relative frequencies. The averaging kernels for this inversion are well localized between 0.985 and 0.996, with a typical half- width of 0.003.

43  Basu & Mandel (2004), Verner, Chaplin & Elsworth (2006) – evidence for solar-cycle change in amplitude of He ionization zone signature (0.98 R ) from GONG, MDI, BiSON data.

44  Eff-Darwich et al 2002 – upper limit of 3e-5 on stratification change at base of convection zone

45  Chou & Serebryanskiy 2005, Serbryanskiy & Chou 2005 – possible wave speed change near bottom of convection zone.

46  Baldner & Basu, 2008  l ≤ 176, 2 ≤ n ≤16  Principal Component Analysis  Interior changes at latitudes below 45 deg.

47  Helioseismology reveals changes in dynamics deep in the convection zone.  Improved knowledge of convection-zone dynamics may help predict future cycles.  Solar activity at the surface influences mode parameters.  Detection of interior structural change is still difficult.


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