Stochastic excitation of nonradial modes II. Are solar asymptotic gravity modes detectable?
K. Belkacem, R. Samadi, M. J. Goupil, M. A. Dupret, A. S. Brun, F., Baudin

TL;DR
This paper provides new theoretical estimates of solar gravity mode amplitudes, suggesting they are higher than previously thought, and assesses the feasibility of detecting these modes with SOHO based on their stochastic excitation and damping.
Contribution
It introduces a revised model for solar g-mode amplitudes using a Lorentzian correlation law and detailed damping calculations, improving detection predictions.
Findings
Asymptotic g-mode velocities are significantly higher than previous estimates.
Damping rates are mainly due to radiative losses, with long mode lifetimes.
Maximum surface velocities are around 3-6 mm/s for key modes.
Abstract
Detection of solar gravity modes remains a major challenge to our understanding of the innerparts of the Sun. Their frequencies would enable the derivation of constraints on the core physical properties while their amplitudes can put severe constraints on the properties of the inner convective region. Our purpose is to determine accurate theoretical amplitudes of solar g modes and estimate the SOHO observation duration for an unambiguous detection. We investigate the stochastic excitation of modes by turbulent convection as well as their damping. Input from a 3D global simulation of the solar convective zone is used for the kinetic turbulent energy spectrum. Damping is computed using a parametric description of the nonlocal time-dependent convection-pulsation interaction. We then provide a theoretical estimation of the intrinsic, as well as apparent, surface velocity. Asymptotic g-mode…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
