Helioseismological determination of the subsurface spatial spectrum of solar convection: Demonstration using numerical simulations
Vincent G. A. B\"oning, Aaron C. Birch, Laurent Gizon, Thomas L., Duvall Jr

TL;DR
This study validates the use of helioseismology to estimate the magnitude of deep solar convective flows by comparing synthetic observations with simulations, emphasizing the importance of accounting for scale dependence and flow direction.
Contribution
It demonstrates that helioseismology can reliably estimate or upper-limit deep solar convective flows when considering scale dependence and flow direction effects.
Findings
Helioseismology estimates match simulation magnitudes within a factor of two.
Correcting for scale dependence confirms the estimates as upper limits.
Method can be applied to infer deep solar convection characteristics.
Abstract
Understanding convection is important in stellar physics, for example as an input in stellar evolution models. Helioseismic estimates of convective flow amplitudes in deeper regions of the solar interior disagree by orders of magnitude among themselves and with simulations. We aim to assess the validity of an existing upper limit of solar convective flow amplitudes at a depth of 0.96 solar radii obtained using time-distance helioseismology and several simplifying assumptions. We generated synthetic observations for convective flow fields from a magnetohydrodynamic simulation (MURaM) using travel-time sensitivity functions and a noise model. We compared the estimates of the flow with the actual values. For the scales of interest (), we find that the current procedure for obtaining an upper limit gives the correct order of magnitude of the flow for the given flow fields. We also…
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