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Excitation of Oscillations in the Sun and Stars Bob Stein - MSU Dali Georgobiani - MSU Regner Trampedach - MSU Martin Asplund - ANU Hans-Gunther Ludwig.

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Presentation on theme: "Excitation of Oscillations in the Sun and Stars Bob Stein - MSU Dali Georgobiani - MSU Regner Trampedach - MSU Martin Asplund - ANU Hans-Gunther Ludwig."— Presentation transcript:

1 Excitation of Oscillations in the Sun and Stars Bob Stein - MSU Dali Georgobiani - MSU Regner Trampedach - MSU Martin Asplund - ANU Hans-Gunther Ludwig - Lund Aake Nordlund - Copenhagen

2 P-Mode Excitation P-modes are excited by PdV work of turbulent and non-adiabatic gas pressure fluctuations, = Reynolds stresses and entropy fluctuations P-modes are excited by PdV work of turbulent and non-adiabatic gas Pressure fluctuations, = Reynolds stresses and Entropy fluctuations

3 P-Mode Excitation Pressure fluctuationMode compression Mode energy Eigenfunction

4 P-Mode Excitation Alternatives Goldreich, Murray & Kumar, 1994 Samadi & Goupil, 2001

5 Use Convection Simulation to Evaluate Excitation

6

7 Computation 3D, Compressible EOS includes ionization Solve –Conservation equations mass, momentum & internal energy –Induction equation –Radiative transfer equation Open boundaries –Fix entropy of inflowing plasma at bottom

8 Method Spatial derivatives - Finite difference –6 th order compact or 3 rd order spline Time advance - Explicit –3 rd order predictor-corrector Diffusion

9 Radiation Transfer LTE Non-gray - multi-group Formal Solution Calculate J - B by integrating Feautrier equations along one vertical and 4 slanted rays through each grid point on the surface.

10 5 Rays Through Each Surface Grid Point Interpolate source function to rays at each height

11 Opacity is binned, according to its magnitude, into 4 bins.

12 Advantage Wavelengths with same  (z) are grouped together, so integral over  and sum over commute

13 Solar Convection

14 Energy Fluxes

15 Mean Atmosphere

16 Entropy Profile

17 Dynamic Effects Non-linear effects –The mean of a dynamic atmosphere is not equal to a static atmosphere –e.g. Planck function is a non-linear function of temperature, except in the infrared T rad > T gas Slow rates –Not enough time to reach equilibrium –e.g. Ionization and recombination slow compared to dynamic times in chromosphere electron density > than LTE

18 A Granule is a fountain velocity arrows, temperature color

19 Solar velocity spectrum MDI doppler (Hathaway) TRACE correlation tracking (Shine) MDI correlation tracking (Shine) 3-D simulations (Stein & Nordlund) v ~ k v ~ k -1/3

20 Stein & Nordlund, ApJL 1989

21 Upflows diverge. Fluid reaching surface comes from small area below the surface

22 Upflows are slow and have nearly the same velocity.

23 Downflows converge. Fluid from surface is compressed to small area below surface

24 Downflows are fast. In 9 min some fluid reaches the bottom.

25 Vertical Velocity red, yellow down & blue, green up surface 8 Mm below Size of horizontal cells increases with depth.

26 Stratified convective flow: diverging upflows, turbulent downflows Velocity arrows, temperature fluctuation image (red hot, blue cool)

27 Vorticity Downflows are turbulent, upflows are more laminar.

28

29 Vorticity surface and depth.

30 Vorticity Distribution Down Up

31 Fluid Parcels reaching the surface Radiate away their Energy and Entropy Z S E  Q 

32 Entropy Green & blue are low entropy downflows, red is high entropy upflows

33 Entropy Distribution

34 P-Mode Oscillations: Stochastic Excitation Nordlund & Stein, ApJ, 546, 576, 2001 Stein & Nordlund, ApJ, 546, 585, 2001

35 Simulation Radial Modes

36 P-Modes = resonant oscillations Cavity: surface small H , depth large T, C s

37 P-Mode Spectrum

38 Oscillation Spectrum, l =740

39

40 P-Mode Intensity - Velocity Phase

41 p-mode frequencies 1D Standard model 3D Convection model

42 Never See Hot Gas

43 3D Effects Inhomogeneous T (see only cool gas), P turb Raises atmosphere 1 scale height

44 P-Mode Excitation Triangles = simulation, Squares = observations (l=0-3) Excitation decreases both at low and high frequencies

45 P-Mode Excitation Mode energy

46 Mode Mass Mode mass increases toward low frequencies, because low frequency modes penetrate deeper

47 P-Mode Excitation Mode compression Eigenfunction

48 Mode Compression Mode compression decreases toward low frequencies, reduces low frequency excitation.

49 P-Mode Excitation Pressure fluctuation

50 Pressure Fluctuations Pressure fluctuations decrease toward high frequency, Reduces high frequency excitation.

51 P-Mode excitation Decreases at low frequencies because of mode properties: –mode mass increases toward low frequencies –mode compression decreases toward low frequencies Decreases at high frequencies because of convection properties: –Turbulent and non-adiabatic gas pressure fluctuations produced by convection and convective motions are low frequency.

52 Turbulent & Gas Pressure P turb & non-adiabatic P gas work comparable near surface, P turb work dominates below surface

53 Turbulent and Gas Pressure Most p-mode driving is by turbulent pressure.

54 P-Mode Excitation

55 Excitation primarily by downflows down & up flows interfere destructively

56 P-Mode Oscillations: Impulsive Excitation Skartlien, Stein & Nordlund, ApJ, 541, 468, 2000

57 Wave Generation Granule disappears Intensity darkens Velocity Pulse: up/down Energy Flux: up/down

58 Vertical Divergence -> Horizontal Convergence Diverging Vertical Flow Converging Horizontal Flow

59 Rarefaction -> Compression RarefactionCompression

60 Other Stars

61 Excitation Spectra Decreasing g Increaseing T eff

62 Reynolds Stress vs. Entropy Fluctuations Star A Sun Eta Boo

63 Excitation P turbulent P non-ad gas

64 Excitation (log g, T eff )

65 P-Mode Excitation Excitation increases with decreasing gravity Excitation increases with increasing effective temperature Excitation by turbulent pressure is comparable to excitation by non-adiabatic gas pressure (entropy) fluctuations MLT

66 The End


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