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    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We determine the radial component of the supergranular flow velocity by examining the center-to-limb variation of the Doppler velocity signal. We acquire individual Doppler images obtained with the MDI instrument on the SOHO spacecraft and process them to remove the p-mode oscillation signal, the axisymmetric flows, the convective blueshift signal, and instrumental artifacts. The remaining Doppler signal contains only cellular flow structures. The Doppler signal from the horizontal flows in these cells varies like sin p, where p is the heliocentric angle from disk center. The Doppler signal from radial flows varies like cos p. We fit the center-to-limb variation of the mean squared velocity signal to a straight line in sin(exp 2) rho over the central portion of the disk. The intercept of this line at disk center gives the amplitude of the radial component of the flow. The slope of the line gives the amplitude of the horizontal component. We find that the radial flows for typical supergranules have speeds about 10% that of their associated horizontal flows or about 30 m/s. The ratio of the radial to horizontal flow speed increases from 9% to about 18% as the size of the cells decreases from 〉 60 Mm to approximately 5 Mm. We use data simulations to check these results and find a ratio that increases from 5% to only about 12% over the same range of cell sizes. These smaller ratios are attributed to an underestimation of the horizontal flow speeds due to the fact that, the transverse component of the horizontal flow is not detected by the Doppler measurements.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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