Solar-cycle variation of the rotational shear near the solar surface
Atefeh Barekat, Jesper Schou, Laurent Gizon

TL;DR
This study measures how the Sun's near-surface rotational shear varies over solar cycle 23 and the rising phase of cycle 24, revealing in-phase and anti-phase behavior at different latitudes, using helioseismic data from MDI and HMI.
Contribution
First to analyze the temporal variation of the near-surface rotational shear over two solar cycles using 360-day helioseismic data series.
Findings
Low-latitude shear varies in-phase with solar activity (~±10%).
High-latitude shear varies anti-phase with solar activity.
Systematic errors identified in 72-day HMI data splittings.
Abstract
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…
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