Helioseismology and Asteroseismology: Looking for Gravitational Waves in acoustic oscillations
Il\'idio Lopes, Joseph Silk

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential for helioseismology to detect gravitational waves through the excitation of solar acoustic modes, suggesting a novel method to observe GWs using solar oscillation data.
Contribution
It proposes that low-order quadrupole acoustic modes in the Sun could be excited by gravitational waves within detectable amplitude ranges, linking helioseismology with GW detection.
Findings
Helioseismology can potentially detect GWs with strain amplitudes around 10^{-20}.
Quadrupole modes may reach surface velocities near current detection limits.
Overlap exists between helioseismic sensitivity and GW sources like ultracompact binaries.
Abstract
Current helioseismology observations allow the determination of the frequencies and surface velocity amplitudes of solar acoustic modes with exceptionally high precision. In some cases, the frequency accuracy is better than one part in a million. We show that there is a distinct possibility that the quadrupole acoustic modes of low order could be excited by gravitational waves (GWs), if the GWs have a strain amplitude in the range with or , as predicted by several types of GW sources, such as galactic ultracompact binaries or extreme mass ratio inspirals and coalescence of black holes. If the damping rate at low order is , with - as inferred from the theory of stellar pulsations, then GW radiation will lead to a maximum rms surface velocity amplitude of quadrupole modes of the…
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