Acoustic wave propagation through solar granulation: Validity of effective-medium theories, coda waves
P.-L. Poulier, D. Fournier, L. Gizon, T. L. Duvall Jr

TL;DR
This study compares theoretical and numerical models of acoustic wave propagation through solar granulation, highlighting the importance of multiple scattering and the limitations of frozen medium approximations in helioseismology.
Contribution
It evaluates effective-medium theories against numerical simulations for solar acoustic waves, emphasizing the role of multiple scattering and coda waves.
Findings
Effective wave speed is reduced in both theories and simulations.
Keller theory best describes wave attenuation and speed.
Coda waves due to multiple scattering are observed in simulations.
Abstract
Context. The frequencies, lifetimes, and eigenfunctions of solar acoustic waves are affected by turbulent convection, which is random in space and in time. Since the correlation time of solar granulation and the periods of acoustic waves (5 min) are similar, the medium in which the waves propagate cannot a priori be assumed to be time independent. Aims. We compare various effective-medium solutions with numerical solutions in order to identify the approximations that can be used in helioseismology. For the sake of simplicity, the medium is one dimensional. Methods. We consider the Keller approximation, the second-order Born approximation, and spatial homogenization to obtain theoretical values for the effective wave speed and attenuation (averaged over the realizations of the medium). Numerically, we computed the first and second statistical moments of the wave field over many…
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