Inertial waves, which are dominantly driven by the Coriolis force, likely
play an important role in solar dynamics, and additionally, provide a window
into the solar subsurface. The latter allows us to infer properties that are
inaccessible to the traditional technique of acoustic-wave helioseismology.
Thus, a full characterization of these normal modes holds promise in enabling
the investigation of solar subsurface dynamics. In this work, we develop a
spectral eigenvalue solver to model the spectrum of inertial waves in the Sun.
We model the solar convection zone as an anelastic medium, and solve for the
normal modes of the momentum and energy equations. We demonstrate that the
solver can reproduce the observed mode frequencies and line-widths well, not
only of sectoral Rossby modes, but also the recently observed high-frequency
inertial modes. In addition, we believe that the spectral solver is a useful
contribution to the numerical methods on modeling inertial modes on the Sun.Comment: 6 Figures, accepted for publication in ApJ