347 research outputs found
Solar-cycle variation of the rotational shear near the solar surface
Helioseismology has revealed that the angular velocity of the Sun increases
with depth in the outermost 35 Mm of the Sun. Recently, we have shown that the
logarithmic radial gradient () in the upper 10~Mm
is close to from the equator to latitude.We aim to measure the
temporal variation of the rotational shear over solar cycle 23 and the rising
phase of cycle 24 (1996-2015). We used f mode frequency splitting data spanning
1996 to 2011 from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) and 2010 to 2015 from the
Helioseismic Magnetic Imager (HMI). In a first for such studies, the f mode
frequency splitting data were obtained from 360-day time series. We used the
same method as in our previous work for measuring from
the equator to latitude in the outer 13~Mm of the Sun. Then, we
calculated the variation of the gradient at annual cadence relative to the
average over 1996 to 2015. We found the rotational shear at low latitudes
( to ) to vary in-phase with the solar activity, varying by
\% over the period 1996 to 2015. At high latitudes ( to
), we found rotational shear to vary in anti-phase with the solar
activity. By comparing the radial gradient obtained from the splittings of the
360-day and the corresponding 72-day time series of HMI and MDI data, we
suggest that the splittings obtained from the 72-day HMI time series suffer
from systematic errors. We provide a quantitative measurement of the temporal
variation of the outer part of the near surface shear layer which may provide
useful constraints on dynamo models and differential rotation theory.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Fragile detection of solar g modes by Fossat et al
The internal gravity modes of the Sun are notoriously difficult to detect,
and the claimed detection of gravity modes presented in Fossat et al. 2017 is
thus very exciting. Given the importance of these modes for understanding solar
structure and dynamics, the results must be robust. While Fossat et al. 2017
described their method and parameter choices in detail, the sensitivity of
their results to several parameters were not presented. Therefore, we test the
sensitivity to a selection of them. The most concerning result is that the
detection vanishes when we adjust the start time of the 16.5 year velocity time
series by a few hours. We conclude that this reported detection of gravity
modes is extremely fragile and should be treated with utmost caution.Comment: 15 pages, 11 Figure
When the point of departure matters:the case of prevention vs. mitigation in management of invasive species
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