Spectrum Estimation in Helioseismology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Spectrum Estimation in Helioseismology

Description:

Solar and Heliospheric Observer (SOHO) Solar Oscillations Investigation ... Oscillations Taste Solar Interior. Frequencies sensitive to material properties ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: philip72
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Spectrum Estimation in Helioseismology


1
Spectrum Estimation in Helioseismology
  • P.B. Stark
  • Department of Statistics
  • University of California
  • Berkeley CA 94720-3860
  • www.stat.berkeley.edu/stark

Source GONG website
2
Acknowledgements
  • Most media pirated from websites of
  • Global Oscillations Network Group (GONG)
  • Solar and Heliospheric Observer (SOHO) Solar
    Oscillations Investigation
  • Collaboration w/ S. Evans (UCB), I.K. Fodor
    (LLNL), C.R. Genovese (CMU), D.O.Gough
    (Cambridge), Y. Gu (GONG), R. Komm (GONG), M.J.
    Thompson (QMW)

Source www.gong.noao.edu
Source sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov
3
The Difference between Theory and Practice
  • In Theory, there is no difference between Theory
    and Practice, but in Practice, there is.
  • Im embarrassed to give a talk about practice to
    this lofty audience of mathematicians.
  • My first work in helioseismology was
    theory/methodology for inverse problems.
  • Surprise! Data not K? ? , ?i iid, zero mean,
    Var(?i) knownbut everyone pretends so.

4
The Sun
  • Closest star, 1.5108 km
  • Radius 6.96105 km
  • Mass 1.9891030 kg
  • Teff 5780 K
  • Luminosity 3.8461026 J/s
  • Surface gravity 274 m/s2
  • Age 4.6109y
  • Mean density 1408 kg/m3
  • Z/X 0.02 Y 0.24

5
The Sun Vibrates
  • Stellar oscillations known since late 1700s.
  • Sun's oscillation observed in 1960 by Leighton,
    Noyes, Simon.
  • Explained as trapped acoustic waves by Ulrich,
    Leibacher, Stein, 1970-1.

Source SOHO-SOI/MDI website
6
Pattern is Superposition of Modes
  • Like vibrations of a spherical guitar string
  • 3 quantum numbers l, m, n
  • l and m are spherical surface wavenumbers
  • n is radial wavenumber

Source GONG website
7
Waves Trapped in Waveguide
  • Low l modes sample more deeply
  • p-modes do not sample core well
  • Sun essentially opaque to EM transparent to
    sound to neutrinos

Source forgotten!
8
Spectrum is very Regular
  • Explanation as modes, plus stellar evolutionary
    theory, predict details of spectrum
  • Details confirmed in data by Deubner, 1975

Source GONG
9
More data for Sun than for Earth
  • Over 107 modes predicted
  • Over 250,000 identified
  • Will be over 106 soon

Formal error bars inflated by 200.Hill et al.,
1996. Science 272, 1292-1295
10
5-minute oscillations
  • Takes a few hours for energy to travel through
    the Sun.
  • p-mode amplitude 1cm/s
  • Brightness variation 10-7
  • Last from hours to months
  • Excited by convection

1 mode 3 modes all
modes
40-day time series of mode coefficients,
speeded-up by 42,000. l1, n20 l0, 1, 2, 3 A.
Kosovichev, SOHO website.
11
Oscillations Taste Solar Interior
  • Frequencies sensitive to material properties
  • Frequencies sensitive to differential rotation
  • If Sun were spherically symmetric and did not
    rotate, frequencies of the 2l1 modes with the
    same l and n would be equal
  • Asphericity and rotation break the degeneracy
    (Scheiner measured 27d equatorial rotation from
    sunspots by 1630. Polar 33d.)
  • Like ultrasound for the Sun

12
Different Modes sample Sun differently
Left raypath for l100, n8 and l2, n8
p-modesRight raypath for l5, n10 g-mode.
g-modes have not been observed
l20 modes. Left m20. Middle m16. (Doppler
velocities)Right section through eigenfunction
of l20, m16, n 14.
Gough et al., 1996. Science 272, 1281-1283
13
Can combine Modes to target locally
Cuts through kernels for rotationA l15, m8.
B l28, m14. C l28, m24.D two targeted
combinations 0.7R, 60o 0.82R, 30oThompson et
al., 1996. Science 272, 1300-1305.
Estimated rotation rate as a function of depthat
three latitudes.Source SOHO-SOI/MDI website
14
Goals of Helioseismology
  • Learn about composition, state, dynamics of
    closest star sunspots, heliodynamo, solar cycle
  • Test/improve theories of stellar evolution
  • Use Sun as physics lab conditions unattainable
    on Earth (neutrino problem, equation of state)
  • Predict space weather?

15
Successes so far
  • Revised depth of the solar convection zone
  • Ruled out dynamo models with rotation constant on
    cylinders
  • Found errors in opacity calculations of numerical
    nuclear physicists
  • Progress in solar neutrino problem

16
Plasma Rivers in the Sun
  • SOHO imaged rivers of solar plasma moving 10
    faster than the surrounding material.
  • NASA top-10 story, 1997.

Source SOHO SOI/MDI website
17
Sun Quakes
  • Can see acoustic waves propagating from a solar
    flare
  • Time-distance helioseismology new field
  • Source SOHO-SOI/MDI website

18
Current Experiments
Experiments range from high-resolution to
Sun-as-a-star.The most extensive with highest
duty cycle are
  • Global Oscillations Network Group (GONG)
  • 6-station terrestrial network Sun never sets
  • Funded by NSF
  • Solar and Heliospheric Observer Solar
    Oscillations Investigation (SOHO-SOI/MDI)
    satellite
  • Orbits L1 Sun never sets
  • Funded by NASA and ESA

19
Velocity from Doppler Shifts Michelson Doppler
Interferometer
  • Measure amplitudes of 3 light frequencies in Ni I
    absorption band, 676.8nm
  • Probes mid-photosphere
  • Get velocity in each pixel of CCD image
  • Developed by T. Brown (HAO/NCAR) in 1980's

Source GONG website
20
Data Reduction
Harvey et al., 1996. Science 272, 1284-1286
21
Why Reduce the Data to Normal Modes?
  • GONG data rate 4GB/day cant invert a year of
    data Mode parameters are a much smaller
    set.(N.b. 4GB/day ? asymptopia)
  • Identifying mode parameters helps separate the
    stochastic disturbance from the characteristics
    of the oscillator
  • Relationship between the time-domain surface
    motion of a stochastically excited gaseous ball
    with magnetic stiffening not well understood

22
GONG Data Pipeline
  • Adjust spherical harmonic coefficients for
    estimated modulation transfer function
  • Merge time series of spherical harmonic
    coefficients from different stations weight for
    relative uncertainties
  • Fill data gaps of up to 30 minutes by ARMA
    modeling
  • Compute periodogram of time series of spherical
    harmonic coefficients
  • Fit parametric model to power spectrum by
    iterative approximate maximum likelihood
  • Identify quantum numbers report frequencies,
    linewidths, background power, and uncertainties
  • Read tapes from sites.
  • Correct for CCD characteristics
  • Transform intensities to Doppler velocities
  • Calibrate velocities using daily calibration
    images
  • Find image geometry and modulation transfer
    function (atmospheric effects, lens dirt,
    instrument characteristics, ...)
  • High-pass filter to remove steady flows
  • Remap images to heliographic coordinates,
    interpolate, resample, correct for line-of-sight
  • Transform to spherical harmonics window,
    Legendre stack in latitude, FFT in longitude

23
Steps in Data Processing
  • Raw intensity image

Doppler velocity image
High-pass filtered to remove rotation flows
24
And more steps
Time series of spherical harmonic coefficients
Spectra of time series, and fitted parametric
models Top GONG website. Bottom Hill et al.,
Science, 1996.
25
Duty Cycle
  • Both GONG and SOHO-SOI/MDI try to get
    uninterrupted data
  • Other experiments at South Polelong day
  • Gaps in data make it harder to estimate the
    oscillation spectrum artifacts in periodogram

26
Effect of Gaps
  • Dont observe process of interest.
  • Observe process window
  • Fourier transform of data is FT of process,
    convolved with FT of window.
  • FT of window has many large sidelobes
  • Convolution causes energy to leak from distant
    frequencies into any particular band of interest.

95 duty cycle window
Power spectrum of window
27
Tapering
  • Want simplicity of periodogram, but less leakage
  • Traditional approachmultiply data by a smooth
    taper that vanishes where there are no data
  • Smoother taper?smaller sidelobes, but more local
    smearing (loss of resolution)
  • Pose choosing taper as optimization problem

28
Optimal Tapering
  • What taper minimizes leakage while maximizing
    resolution?
  • Leakage is a bias optimality depends on
    definition
  • Broad-band asymptotic yield eigenvalue problems

29
Prolate Spheroidal Tapers
  • Maximize the fraction of energy in a band -w, w
    around zero
  • Analytic solution when no gaps
  • 2wT tapers nearly perfect
  • others very poor
  • Must choose w
  • Character different with gaps

T 1024, w 0.004. FodorStark, 2000. IEEE
Trans. Sig. Proc., 48, 3472-3483
30
Minimum Asymptotic Bias Tapers
  • Minimize integral of spectrum against frequency
    squared
  • Leading term in asymptotic bias

T 1024 FodorStark, 2000. IEEE Trans. Sig.
Proc., 48, 3472-3483
31
Sine Tapers
  • Without gaps, approximate minimum asymptotic bias
    tapers
  • With gaps, reorthogonalize w.r.t. gap structure

T 1024.FodorStark, 2000. IEEE Trans. Sig.
Proc. 48, 3472-3483.
32
Optimization Problems
  • Prolate and minimum asymptotic bias tapers are
    top eigenfunctions of large eigenvalue problems
  • The problems have special structure can be
    solved efficiently (top 6 tapers for T103,680 in
    lt 1day)
  • Sine tapers very cheap to compute

33
Sample Concentration of TapersT1024, w 0.004
Fodor Stark, 2000. IEEE Trans. Sig. Proc., 48,
3472-3483
34
Sample Asymptotic Bias of Tapers, T 1024
Fodor Stark, 2000. IEEE Trans. Sig. Proc., 48,
3472-3483
35
Multitaper Estimation
  • Top several eigenfunctions have eigenvalues close
    to 1.
  • Eigenvalues drop to zero, abruptly for no-gap
  • Estimates using orthogonal tapers are
    asymptotically independent (mild conditions)
  • Averaging spectrum estimates from several good
    tapers can decrease variance without increasing
    bias much.
  • Get rank K quadratic estimator.

36
Multitaper Procedure
  • Compute K orthogonal tapers, each with good
    concentration
  • Multiply data by each taper in turn
  • Compute periodogram of each product
  • Average the periodograms
  • Special case break data into segments

37
Cheapest is Fine
  • For simulated and real helioseismic time series
    of length T103,680, no discernable systematic
    difference among 12-taper multitaper estimates
    using the three families of tapers.
  • Use re-orthogonalized sine tapers because they
    are much cheaper to compute, for each gap pattern
    in each time series.

38
Multitaper Simulation
  • Can combine with segmenting to decrease
    dependence
  • Prettier than periodogram less leakage.
  • Better, too?

T103,680. Truth in grey. Left panels
periodogram. Right panels 3-segment 4-taper
gapped sine taper estimate. FodorStark, 2000.
39
Multitaper SOHO Data
  • Easier to identify mode parameters from
    multitaper spectrum
  • Maximum likelihood more stable can identify 20
    to 60 more modes (Komm et al., 1999. Ap.J., 519,
    407-421)

SOHO l85, m0. T 103, 680. Periodogram (left)
and 3-segment 4 sine taper estimateFodorStark,
2000. IEEE Trans. Sig. Proc., 48, 3472-3483
40
Error bars Confidence Level in Simulation
1,000 realizations of simulated normal mode data.
95 target confidence level. Fodor Stark,
2000. IEEE Trans. Sig. Proc., 48, 3472-3483
41
Pivot
  • Asymptotic pivot asymptotic distribution does
    not depend on unknown parameter
  • For K multitaper estimate, ? 10log10S(f),

Pivot Rn (T- ?)/?
42
Depth of Convection Zone
  • D. O. Gough showed using helioseismic data that
    the solar convection zone probably is rather
    thicker than had been thought.

43
Falsified dynamo models
  • Since the mid-1980s, many studies of solar
    rotation using frequency splittings (broken
    degeneracy from rotation) have shed doubt on
    dynamo models that required rotation to be
    roughly constant on cylinders in the convection
    zone.

44
Errors in Opacity Calculations
  • The standard solar model fit the estimates of
    soundspeed better with opacity at base of
    convection zone modified in an ad hoc way.
  • Physicists who calculated original opacity found
    bound-state contribution of iron had been
    underestimated.
  • Led to 10-20 error in opacity at base of
    convection zone.
  • Revised opacities fit solar data
  • Explained mysterious pulsation period ratios of
    Cepheid stars

Duval, 1984. Nature, 310, p22.
45
Solar Neutrino Problem
  • Measurements of solar neutrino flux lower than
    predicted by nuclear physics stellar evolution
    models
  • Not clear whether problem with nuclear physics or
    with theory of stellar evolution
  • Helioseismology suggests low Helium abundance in
    core not plausible explanation

46
Linear Inverse Problem for Rotation
Assumes eigenfunctions and radial structure known.
47
Consistency in Linear Inverse Problems
  • Xi ?i? ?i, i1, 2, 3, ??? subset of
    separable Banach?i? ? linear, bounded on ?
    ?i iid ?
  • ? consistently estimable w.r.t. weak topology
    iff?Tk, Tk Borel function of X1, . . . , Xk
    s.t. ????, ??gt0, ?? ??, limk P??Tk - ? ?gt?
    0

48
Importance of Error Distribution
  • µ a prob. measure on ? µa(B) µ(B-a), a? ?
  • Hellinger distance
  • Pseudo-metric on ?
  • If restriction to ? converges uniformly on
    increasing sequence of compacts to metric
    compatible with weak topology, and those compacts
    are totally bdd wrt d, can estimate ?
    consistently in weak topology.
  • For given sequence of functionals ?i, µ rougher
    ? consistent estimation easier.

49
Normal is Hardest
  • Suppose ? ?? ??0,1, ??T Hilbert
  • If ?i iid U0,1, consistent iff ?lt?i, ?gt?.
  • If ?i iid N0,1, consistent iff ?lt?i, ?gt2
    ?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com