Amplitude of solar gravity modes generated by penetrative plumes
C. Pin\c{c}on, T. Appourchaux, G. Buldgen

TL;DR
This paper predicts the amplitudes of solar gravity modes generated by penetrative convection, showing that their detectability strongly depends on the plume's temporal evolution, with exponential models yielding potentially observable signals within decades.
Contribution
It introduces a model for gravity mode amplitudes driven by penetrative plumes, highlighting the importance of plume time evolution and providing estimates for surface velocities relevant to observations.
Findings
Gaussian plume evolution yields undetectable modes.
Exponential plume evolution can produce detectable modes within ~50 years.
Maximum predicted surface velocity is 0.05 cm/s for certain modes.
Abstract
The detection of gravity modes is expected to give us unprecedented insights into the inner dynamics of the Sun. Within this framework, predicting their amplitudes is essential to guide future observational strategies and seismic studies. In this work, we predict the amplitude of low-frequency asymptotic gravity modes generated by penetrative convection at the top of the radiative zone. The result is found to depend critically on the time evolution of the plumes inside the generation region. Using a solar model, we compute the GOLF apparent surface radial velocity of low-degree gravity modes in the frequency range . In case of a Gaussian plume time evolution, gravity modes turn out to be undetectable because of too small surface amplitudes. This holds true despite a wide range of values considered for the parameters of the model. In the other limiting…
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