Bibcode
Turck-Chièze, S.; Garcí, R. A.; Couvidat, S.; Kosovichev, A. G.; Bertello, L.; Corbad, T.; Berthomieu, G.; Provost, J.; Eff-Darwich, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
In: Proceedings of the SOHO 11 Symposium on From Solar Min to Max: Half a Solar Cycle with SOHO, 11-15 March 2002, Davos, Switzerland. A symposium dedicated to Roger M. Bonnet. Edited by A. Wilson, ESA SP-508, Noordwijk: ESA Publications Division, ISBN 92-9092-818-2, 2002, p. 593 - 596
Fecha de publicación:
6
2002
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
Solar global oscillations have now been measured for more than 20 years.
The study of these modes has contributed to improve, along time, the
description of the solar core. We have now a proper access to this part
of the Sun, with ground networks observing for more than 10 years and
the three instruments aboard SOHO in a quasi continuous mode for now
half a cycle. In this talk, we show the advantages of the global
acoustic modes measured at low frequency. They are due to their longer
lifetime and the reduced influence of the turbulent and variable surface
effects. As a consequence, we have converged last year, after 30 years
of unsuccess, to a boron-8 emitted neutrino flux in perfect agreement
with the better understood detection of these neutrinos on earth. The
splitting at low frequency is also now properly determined but the
extracted rotation information is still limited in the core. It contains
nevertheless the first dynamical vision of this part of the radiative
zone. We will focus on it up to the end of the SOHO mission, together
with the gravity mode region and the possible internal signature of the
magnetic field. Some limits are given on these observables. Further
improvements of their detectability are under study and will be
mentioned.