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Retrograde Rossby waves, measured to have significant amplitudes in the Sun, likely have notable implications for various solar phenomena. Rossby waves create small-amplitude, very-low frequency motions (on the order of the rotation rate and lower), which in turn shift the resonant frequencies and eigenfunctions of the acoustic modes of the Sun. The detection of even azimuthal orders Rossby modes using mode coupling presents additional challenges and prior work therefore only focused on odd orders. Here, we successfully extend the methodology to measure even azimuthal orders as well. We analyze 4 and 8 years of Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) data and consider coupling between different-degree acoustic modes (of separations 1 and 3 in harmonic degree). The technique uses couplings between different frequency bins to capture the temporal variability of the Rossby modes. We observe significant power close to the theoretical dispersion relation for sectoral Rossby modes (where the azimuthal order is same as harmonic degree, s = |t|). Our results are consistent with prior measurements of Rossby modes with azimuthal orders over the range t = 4 to 16 with maximum power occurring at mode t = 8. The amplitudes of these modes vary from 1 to 2 m/s. We place an upper bound of 0.2 m/s on the sectoral t = 2 mode, which we do not detect in our measurements. This effort adds credence to the mode-coupling methodology in helioseismology
Normal-mode coupling is a technique applied to probe the solar interior using surface observations of oscillations. The technique, which is straightforward to implement, makes more use of the seismic information in the wavefield than other comparable
Large-scale Rossby waves have recently been discovered from measurements of horizontal surface and near-surface solar flows (Loptien at al. 2018). We are interested in understanding why only the sectoral modes are seen in the observations and also in
Since few decades, asteroseismology, the study of stellar oscillations, enables us to probe the interiors of stars with great precision. It allows stringent tests of stellar models and can provide accurate radii, masses and ages for individual stars.
Nonlinear growth of the bar-mode deformation is studied for a differentially rotating star with supercritical rotational energy. In particular, the growth mechanism of some azimuthal modes with odd wave numbers is examined by comparing a simplified m