Impacts of zonal winds on planetary oscillations and Saturn ring seismology
Janosz W. Dewberry, Christopher R. Mankovich, Jim Fuller

TL;DR
This study improves understanding of Saturn's internal oscillations by accurately modeling the effects of zonal winds and differential rotation, revealing small but significant biases in mode frequency estimates and implications for ring seismology.
Contribution
It introduces a non-perturbative method to model differential rotation effects on Saturn's oscillation modes, correcting previous overestimations and analyzing mode mixing impacts.
Findings
Previous models overestimate f-mode frequency shifts due to differential rotation.
Higher order rotational effects significantly enhance gravitational perturbations of g-modes.
Observed density wave splitting likely does not involve high-degree g-modes, constraining Saturn's internal structure.
Abstract
The excitation of density and bending waves in Saturn's C ring by planetary oscillation modes presents a unique opportunity to learn about gas giant interiors and rotation. However, theoretical complications related to Saturn's rapid and differential rotation pose a barrier to the full utilization of ring wave detections. We calculate oscillation modes using a complete, non-perturbative treatment of differential rotation modelled after Saturn's zonal winds in self-consistently computed, polytropic equilibria. We find that previous, approximate treatments of the effects of differential rotation in Saturn overestimate shifts in the frequencies of fundamental modes (f-modes) thought to be responsible for the majority of the waves detected in the C ring, due to an omitted modification of the equilibrium shape and structure of the planet by differential rotation. The bias introduced by these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Space Exploration and Technology
