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      The Quest to Understand Supergranulation and Large-Scale Convection in the Sun

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          Abstract

          Surface granulation of the Sun is primarily a consequence of thermal transport in the outer 1 % of the radius. Its typical scale of about 1 - 2 Mm is set by the balance between convection, free-streaming radiation, and the strong density stratification in the surface layers. The physics of granulation is well understood, as demonstrated by the close agreement between numerical simulation, theory, and observation. Superimposed on the energetic granular structure comprising high-speed flows, are larger scale long-lived flow systems (~ 300 m/s) called supergranules. Supergranulation has a typical scale of 24 - 36 Mm. It is not clear if supergranulation results from the interaction of granules or is causally linked to deep convection or a consequence of magneto-convection. Other outstanding questions remain: how deep are supergranules? How do they participate in global dynamics of the Sun? Further challenges are posed by our lack of insight into the dynamics of larger scales in the deep convection region. Recent helioseismic constraints have suggested that convective velocity amplitudes on large scales may be overestimated by an order of magnitude or more, implying that Reynolds stresses associated with large-scale convection, thought to play a significant role in the sustenance of differential rotation and meridional circulation, might be two orders of magnitude weaker than theory and computation predict. While basic understanding on the nature of convection on global scales and the maintenance of global circulations is incomplete, progress is imminent, given substantial improvements in computation, theory and helioseismic inferences.

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          Seismic tomography, adjoint methods, time reversal and banana-doughnut kernels

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            Adjoint Tomography of the Southern California Crust

            Using an inversion strategy based on adjoint methods, we developed a three-dimensional seismological model of the southern California crust. The resulting model involved 16 tomographic iterations, which required 6800 wavefield simulations and a total of 0.8 million central processing unit hours. The new crustal model reveals strong heterogeneity, including local changes of +/-30% with respect to the initial three-dimensional model provided by the Southern California Earthquake Center. The model illuminates shallow features such as sedimentary basins and compositional contrasts across faults. It also reveals crustal features at depth that aid in the tectonic reconstruction of southern California, such as subduction-captured oceanic crustal fragments. The new model enables more realistic and accurate assessments of seismic hazard.
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              Three-dimensional sensitivity kernels for finite-frequency traveltimes: the banana-doughnut paradox

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                31 December 2013
                Article
                10.1007/s11207-014-0471-4
                1401.0110
                b31375a8-8742-4641-8d36-4e56c03400d6

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                19 pages, 4 figures, Invited Review, Accepted for publication in Solar Physics Topical Edition
                astro-ph.SR physics.flu-dyn

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