Viscous inertial modes on a differentially rotating sphere: Comparison with solar observations
Damien Fournier, Laurent Gizon, Laura Hyest

TL;DR
This study extends the analysis of solar inertial modes to spherical geometry with realistic differential rotation and viscosity, revealing multiple mode families and identifying modes that resemble observed solar inertial oscillations.
Contribution
It introduces a 2D spherical model including viscous damping to analyze the spectrum of inertial modes, comparing results with solar observations and exploring mode stability.
Findings
Multiple mode families identified, including Rossby and high-latitude modes.
Least damped modes match observed frequencies and eigenfunctions.
Some modes are predicted to be unstable under certain conditions.
Abstract
In a previous paper we studied the effect of latitudinal rotation on solar equatorial Rossby modes in the beta-plane approximation. Since then, a rich spectrum of inertial modes has been observed on the Sun, which is not limited to the equatorial Rossby modes and includes high-latitude modes. Here we extend the computation of toroidal modes in 2D to spherical geometry, using realistic solar differential rotation and including viscous damping. The aim is to compare the computed mode spectra with the observations and to study mode stability. At fixed radius, we solve the eigenvalue problem numerically using a spherical harmonics decomposition of the velocity stream function. Due to the presence of viscous critical layers, the spectrum consists of four different families: Rossby modes, high-latitude modes, critical-latitude modes, and strongly damped modes. For each longitudinal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
