Measurement Technique for Meridional Circulation in Solar Activity

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In this research, time-distance measurements were conducted to study meridional circulation in solar activity. The east-west signal was found to be similar to the north-south signal, prompting analysis steps involving spherical harmonics computation, image reconstruction, filtering, cross-correlations, and travel time computations. The technique included using longitude-sin(latitude) coordinate system, computing spherical harmonics, reconstructing images on azimuth-heliocentric angle coordinate system, and analyzing symmetric and antisymmetric components to separate rotation and meridional circulation.


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  1. Time-distance measurements of meridional circulation using pairs of points at equal center-to- limb angle Tom Duvall Deep Chakraborty Tim Larsen

  2. The problem: east-west signal very similar to north-south

  3. Geometry for measurement technique

  4. Analysis steps: 1) each HMI image is put onto a longitude-sin(latitude) cooordinate system (Tim) 2) Spherical harmonics computed for l<=300 (Tim) 3) Images reconstructed on azimuth-heliocentric angle coordinate system for 1 year. This involves putting b0 back in. (Tom, Deep, Tim, Shukur) 4) Filtering is done only as a 1st difference in time. (Tom) 5) Cross correlations for each day for different lags in azimuth and at the different heliocentric angles separately. 6) Average correlations over 1 year. 7) Travel times computed using the Gizon-Birch method. A separate reference cross correlation is computed for each heliocentric angle. 8) Travel time differences are computed for oppositely directed waves. 9) Symmetric and antisymmetric components about the central meridian to separate rotation and meridional circulation.

  5. Polynomial fit to travel time vs. azimuth

  6. Symmetric and antisymmetric parts (across central meridian)

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