Bibcode
Yasukawa, E.; Saa, O.; Patron, J.; Marquette, W.; Kennewell, J. A.; Bhatnagar, A.; Ulrich, R. K.; Toomre, J.; Title, A. M.; Noyes, R. W.; Gilman, P. A.; Pintar, J. A.; Leibacher, J. W.; Kennedy, J. R.; Hubbard, R. P.; Hill, F.; Harvey, J. W.
Bibliographical reference
Science, Volume 272, Issue 5266, pp. 1284-1286
Advertised on:
5
1996
Journal
Citations
471
Refereed citations
395
Description
Helioseismology requires nearly continuous observations of the
oscillations of the solar surface for long periods of time in order to
obtain precise measurements of the sun's normal modes of oscillation.
The GONG project acquires velocity images from a network of six
identical instruments distributed around the world. The GONG network
began full operation in October 1995. It has achieved a duty cycle of 89
percent and reduced the magnitude of spectral artifacts by a factor of
280 in power, compared with single-site observations. The instrumental
noise is less than the observed solar background.