A "dandelion" g-mode in the #radiative core of a #Boussinesq #sun:
#Helioseismology #Astrodon #Astrophysics
@repepo is this a simulation or just an infography?
@mekonto it’s a simulation using this code https://github.com/repepo/kore
@repepo That's so nice, but you say in the repo that the code is for incompressible fluids so I guess it is meant only for planetary seismic waves and not stellar seismic waves, or is it?
@mekonto the code uses the Boussinesq approximation to filter out acoustic waves (some seismic waves are acoustic, so it cannot model those). The waves it can model are those restored by gravity (g modes), Coriolis (inertial modes), or magnetic (Alfven waves). Or combination of the three regardless of whether it is a fluid core in a planet, or a subsurface ocean (like in some icy moons), or a star.
@repepo I see, I think now I understand. So what you show in the picture is just the core of the Sun, where Boussinesq approx. is fine but the external part of the Sun is not shown because cannot be modelled so no convective layer, right?
@mekonto no prob! yes I'm doing research. Lots of exploration here and there and the plot came out from one of those 🙂