Abstract

Standard solar models (SSMs) constructed in accordance with old solar abundances are in reasonable agreement with seismically inferred results, but SSMs with new low-metal abundances disagree with the seismically inferred results. The constraints of neutrino fluxes on solar models exist in parallel with those of helioseismic results. The solar neutrino fluxes were updated by Borexino Collaboration. We constructed rotating solar models with new low-metal abundances where the effects of enhanced diffusion and convection overshoot were included. A rotating model using OPAL opacities and the Caffau abundance scale has better sound-speed and density profiles than the SSM with the old solar abundances and reproduces the observed $p$-mode frequency ratios $r_{02}$ and $r_{13}$. The depth and helium abundance of the convection zone of the model agree with the seismically inferred ones at the level of $1\sigma$. The updated neutrino fluxes are also reproduced by the model at the level of $1\sigma$. The effects of rotation and enhanced diffusion not only improve the model's sound-speed and density profiles but bring the neutrino fluxes predicted by the model into agreement with the detected ones. Moreover, the calculations show that OP may underestimate opacities for the regions of the Sun with $T\gtrsim5\times10^{6}$ K by around $1.5\%$, while OPAL may underestimate opacities for the regions of the Sun with $2\times10^{6}$ K $\lesssim T \lesssim 5\times10^{6}$ K by about $1-2\%$.

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