English

Can We Constrain the Solar Interior Physics Studying the Gravity-Mode Asymptotic Signature?

Astrophysics 2008-04-01 v1

Abstract

Gravity modes are the best probes to infer the properties of the solar radiative zone that represents 98% of the Sun's total mass. It is usually assumed that high-frequency g modes give information about the structure of the solar interior whereas low-frequency g modes are more sensitive to the solar dynamics (the internal rotation). In this work, we develop a new methodology, based on the analysis of the almost constant separation of the dipole gravity modes, to introduce new constraints on the solar models. To validate this analysis procedure, several solar models -- including different physical processes and either old or new chemical abundances (from, respectively, Grevesse and Noels (Origin and evolution of the elements. Cambridge, England, 199, 15, 1993) and Asplund, Grevesse, and Sauval (Astron. Soc. Pac. CS, San Francisco, 36, 25, 2005)) -- have been compared to another model used as a reference. The analysis clearly shows that this methodology has enough sensitivity to distinguish between some of the models, in particular, between those with different compositions. The comparison of the models with the g-mode asymptotic signature detected in GOLF data favors the ones with old abundances. Therefore, the physics of the core -- through the analysis of the g-mode properties -- is in agreement with the results obtained in the previous studies based on the acoustic modes, which are mostly sensitive to more external layers of the Sun.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0803.0229,
  title  = {Can We Constrain the Solar Interior Physics Studying the Gravity-Mode Asymptotic Signature?},
  author = {R. A. Garcia and S. Mathur and J. Ballot},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.0229},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in Solar Physics. 14 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:17:45.850Z