Charles Explorer logo
🇬🇧

Comparison of time-distance inversion methods applied to SDO/HMI Dopplergrams

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2019

Abstract

Context. The Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) satellite has been observing the Sun since 2010.

The uninterrupted series of Dopplergrams are ideal for studying the dynamics of the upper solar convection zone. Within the Joint Science Operations Center (JSOC) the time-distance inversions for flows and sound-speed perturbations were introduced.

The automatic pipeline has produced flow and sound-speed maps every 8 h. We verify the results of JSOC inversions by comparing the data products to equivalent results from inverse modelling obtained by an independent inversion pipeline.

Aims. We compared the results from the JSOC pipeline for horizontal flow components and the perturbations of the speed of sound at set of depths with equivalent results from an independently implemented pipeline using a different time-distance inversion scheme.

Our inversion pipeline allows inversion for all quantities at once while allowing minimisation of the crosstalk between them. This gives us an opportunity to discuss the possible biases present in the JSOC data products.

Methods. For the tests we used the subtractive optimally localised averaging (SOLA) method with a minimisation of the cross-talk.

We compared three test inversions for each quantity at each target depth. At first, we used the JSOC setup to reproduce the JSOC results.

Subsequently, we used the extended pipeline to improve these results by incorporating more independent travel-time measurements but keeping the JSOC-indicated localisation in the Sun. Finally, we inverted for flow components and sound-speed perturbations using a localisation kernel with properties advertised in the JSOC metadata.

Results. We successfully reproduced the horizontal flow components.

The sound-speed perturbations are strongly affected by the high level of the cross-talk in JSOC products. This leads to larger amplitudes in the inversions for the sound-speed perturbations.

Different results were obtained when a target function localised around the target depth was used. This is a consequence of non-localised JSOC averaging kernels.

We add that our methodology also allows inversion for the vertical flow.