Abstract

Context. Helioseismology is the study of the Sun’s interior using observations of oscillations at the surface. It suffers from systematic errors, for instance a center-to-limb error in travel-time measurements. Understanding these errors requires an adequate understanding of the nontrivial relationship between wave displacement and helioseismic observables (intensity or velocity). Aims. The wave displacement causes perturbations in the atmospheric thermodynamical quantities which, in turn, perturb the opacity, the optical depth, the source function, and the local ray geometry, thus affecting the emergent intensity. We aim to establish the most complete relationship achieved to date between the wave displacement and the emergent intensity perturbation by solving the radiative transfer problem in the perturbed atmosphere. Methods. We derived an expression for the emergent intensity perturbation caused by acoustic oscillations at any point on the solar disk by applying a first-order perturbation theory. As input perturbations, we considerd adiabatic modes of oscillation of different degrees in a spherically-symmetric solar model. The background and the perturbed intensities are computed by solving the radiative transfer equation considering the main sources of opacity in the continuum (absorption and scattering). Results. We find that for all modes, the perturbations to the thermodynamical quantities are not sufficient to model the intensity perturbations: the geometrical effects due to the wave displacement must always be taken into account as they lead to a difference in amplitude and a phase shift between temperature perturbations at the surface and emergent intensity perturbations. The closer to the limb, the greater the differences. For modes with eigenfrequencies around 3 mHz, we found that the radial and horizontal components of the wave displacement are important, in particular, for high-degree modes. Conclusions. This work presents improvements for the computation of the intensity perturbations, in particular, for high-degree modes. Here, we explain the differences in intensity computations seen in earlier works. The phase shifts and amplitude differences between the temperature and intensity perturbations increase toward the limb. This should prove helpful when interpreting some of the systematic centre-to-limb effects observed in local helioseismology. The computations are fast (3 s for 2000 positions and one frequency for one core) and can be parallelised. This work can be extended to models of the line-of-sight velocity observable.

Highlights

  • Studies of local helioseismology are aimed at probing the subsurface structure and the dynamics of the solar convection zone

  • We aim to establish the most complete relationship achieved to date between the wave displacement and the emergent intensity perturbation by solving the radiative transfer problem in the perturbed atmosphere

  • We find that for all modes, the perturbations to the thermodynamical quantities are not sufficient to model the intensity perturbations: the geometrical effects due to the wave displacement must always be taken into account as they lead to a difference in amplitude and a phase shift between temperature perturbations at the surface and emergent intensity perturbations

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Summary

Introduction

Studies of local helioseismology are aimed at probing the subsurface structure and the dynamics of the solar convection zone. Baldner & Schou (2012) proposed that another contribution may be due to the interaction of p-modes with granulation, viewed from different lines of sight Both authors stress that a full quantitative prediction of the centre-to-limb effect requires solving the radiative transfer problem in the atmosphere perturbed by p-modes. An important improvement in this direction was undertaken by Toutain & Gouttebroze (1993, hereafter TG93) who derived a more complete expression for emergent intensity that takes into account the opacity perturbations caused by solar oscillations of low-degree modes in a non-grey atmosphere. We derive the expression for emergent intensity perturbations induced by oscillations of different modes taking into account the radial and horizontal components of the wave displacement. We summarise our study and discuss the possible extensions

Coordinate systems
Radiative transfer equation
Radiative transfer in perturbed atmosphere
Comparison of intensity perturbation derivation with previous studies
Numerical inputs for intensity calculations
Background model
Opacity
Computation of intensity perturbation due to acoustic oscillations
Comparison with direct computation
Comparison of intensity computation in other studies
Summary and discussion

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