Stochastic microhertz gravitational radiation from stellar convection
M. F. Bennett, A. Melatos

TL;DR
This paper models the stochastic gravitational wave background generated by stellar convection turbulence, finding the Solar contribution could be detectable by pulsar timing arrays, but other sources are below future detector sensitivities.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed calculation of gravitational wave spectra from stellar convection across different stellar masses and populations, highlighting the Solar signal's potential detectability.
Findings
Solar gravitational wave signal peaks at 2.3e-7 Hz
Near-zone amplification enhances Solar signal at low frequencies
Stellar convection noise sets a fundamental limit for future detectors
Abstract
High-Reynolds-number turbulence driven by stellar convection in main-sequence stars generates stochastic gravitational radiation. We calculate the wave-strain power spectral density as a function of the zero-age main-sequence mass for an individual star and for an isotropic, universal stellar population described by the Salpeter initial mass function and redshift-dependent Hopkins-Beacom star formation rate. The spectrum is a broken power law, which peaks near the turnover frequency of the largest turbulent eddies. The signal from the Sun dominates the universal background. For the Sun, the far-zone power spectral density peaks at Hz at frequency Hz. However, at low observing frequencies Hz, the Earth lies inside the Sun's near zone and the signal is amplified to…
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