Bibcode
Jiménez, A.; García, R. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement, Volume 184, Issue 2, pp. 288-297 (2009).
Fecha de publicación:
10
2009
Número de citas
17
Número de citas referidas
12
Descripción
Gravity modes in the Sun have been the object of a long and difficult
search in recent decades. Thanks to the data accumulated with the last
generation of instruments (BiSON, GONG, and three helioseismic
instruments aboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)),
scientists have been able to find signatures of their presence. However,
the individual detection of such modes remains evasive. In this article,
we study the signal at 220.7 μHz which is a peak that is present in
most of the helioseismic data of the last 10 years. This signal has
already been identified as being a component of a g-mode candidate
detected in the GOLF Doppler velocity signal. The nature of this peak is
studied in particular using the VIRGO/SPM instrument aboard SOHO. First
we analyze all the available instrumental data of VIRGO and SOHO
(housekeeping) to reject any possible instrumental origin. No relation
was found, implying that the signal has a solar origin. Using Monte
Carlo simulations, we find, with more than 99% confidence level, that
the signal found in VIRGO/SPM is very unlikely to be due to pure noise.
Proyectos relacionados
Sismología Solar y Estelar y Búsqueda de Exoplanetas
Los objetivos genéricos de este Proyecto son: 1) el estudio de la estructura y dinámica del interior solar, 2) la extensión de dicho estudio al caso de otras estrellas, 3) la búsqueda y caracterización de planetas extrasolares por métodos fotométricos (principalmente mediante el método de tránsitos) y espectroscópico (variaciones en la velocidad
Savita
Mathur