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can count as a major success story in solar physics. It adds condence in our
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numerical methods and in our understanding of the physics of solar magnetic
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activity.
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There are many complications in local helioseismology that have not been
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studied in detail, e.g. instrumental artifacts (point spread function, astigmatism,
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plate scale), interpretation of the observable (e.g., ltergrams used to construct
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Dopplergrams) in terms of physical conditions in the solar atmosphere, center-58 Gizon, Birch & Spruit
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to-limb eects such as foreshortening, and light-of-sight projection of the solar
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velocity. Other complications are related to the physics of wave propagation, e.g.
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surface magnetic eects, scattering by time-varying heterogeneities (turbulence),
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multiple scattering, and physical description of wave excitation and attenuation.
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Understanding and, in some cases, correcting for these issues is needed to ap-
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ply local helioseismology to challenging problems: deep meridional circulation
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(Braun & Birch 2008), detecting subsurface emerging active regions, high lati-
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tudes, statistical description of turbulent
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ows (e.g. Reynolds stresses), etc. In
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addition, inferring small amplitude perturbations in the solar interior may re-
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quire may years of observations and/or appropriate spatial/temporal averaging
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to optimize signal-to-noise ratio.
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Finally, it is worth exploring the many connections between the results of local
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helioseismology and global-mode helioseismology: for example, the contribution
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of active regions to the temporal variations of low-degree mode frequencies, com-
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parisons of rotation measurements (e.g., 1 :3-year tachocline oscillations), deep
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sound speed anomalies (Zhao et al. 2009), and seismic radii (Gonz alez Hern andez,
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Scherrer & Hill 2009; Kholikov & Hill 2008). In principle, local helioseismology
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should help provide improve surface boundary conditions for global-mode inver-
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sions.
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SUMMARY POINTS
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1. Local helioseismology shows that supergranules are characterized by
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200 m s 1horizontal out
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ows and 20 m s 1up
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ows near the surface. Mag-
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netic eld concentrations are observed at the boundaries of supergranules
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and the inclined eld provides portals through which low-frequency waves
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propagate into the chromosphere. The correlation between the horizontal
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divergence of the
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ow and the vertical component of vorticity has been
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measured as a function of latitude: cyclonic convection is explained by the
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eect of the Coriolis force. The pattern of supergranulation has (unex-
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plained) wave-like properties.
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2. The amplitudes, phases, and frequencies of the solar waves are strongly
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aected by sunspots. Sunspots \absorb" a fraction of the ingoing waves
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as they partially convert into downward propagating slow MHD waves.
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Sunspots are surrounded by a horizontal out
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ow (several hundred m s 1)
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in an annular region extending as far as twice the penumbral radius. This
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moat
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ow, which persists at least in the top 4 Mm, is consistent with di-
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rect observations of the solar surface. Little is known about the subsurface
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magnetic and thermal structure of sunspots. Forward modeling of the he-
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lioseismic wave eld requires a surface eld of several kG. Multi-height ob-
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servations of solar oscillations have been used to map the sunspot magnetic
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canopy.Local Helioseismology 59
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3. Local helioseismology has conrmed the latitudinal dierential rotation and
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the increase of rotation with depth in the top 35 Mm of the convection
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zone (near-surface shear layer). Flows in meridional planes have been mea-
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sured by local helioseismology in the top 50 Mm. For latitudes less than
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45, the longitudinal component of the
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ow is poleward, with a maximum
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amplitude of 15 m s 1. It is not clear whether the meridional
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ow can be
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detected reliably deeper or at higher latitudes.
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4. The solar-cycle variation of rotation has been conrmed: bands of faster
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and slower rotation ( 10 m s 1) migrate in latitude with magnetic activity.
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In addition, local helioseismology has revealed that the longitudinal-average
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of the meridional
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ow also varies with the solar cycle ( 5 m s 1), i.e. by
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a signicant fraction of its mean value. Near the surface, the time residu-
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als are consistent with a North-South in
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ow around the mean latitude of
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activity. At a depth of 50 Mm, the residuals are consistent with a small
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out
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ow.
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5. On intermediate scales ( 20) weak horizontal in
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ows ( 50 m s 1) have
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been detected around complexes of magnetic activity, near the surface. If
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conrmed, these
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ows may explain the time evolution of the longitudinal
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average of the meridional
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ow. At greater depths ( >10 Mm) the horizontal
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ows appear to switch sign and diverge from centers of magnetic activity
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(50 m s 1). In addition, the surface in
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ows are associated with cyclonic
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vorticity.
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6. Farside helioseismology works. Large active regions can be detected on
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the invisible hemisphere of the Sun, thus providing advanced warning of
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energetic particle events, days before they occur on the front side.
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FUTURE ISSUES
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1. The most pressing issue in local helioseismology is how to interpret mag-
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netic eects, which requires new methods of analysis. This is illustrated by
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the fact that the standard methods of analysis yield con
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icting inferences
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regarding sunspot structure and dynamics (see e.g. Figure 16 ). The way
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forward is to develop methods that incorporate appropriate physical mod-
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els of the interaction of waves with strong magnetic elds near the surface.
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Surface magnetic eects must be accounted for before we can detect and
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study the magnetic eld below the photosphere.
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2. Instrumental artifacts often dominate realization noise and hamper the
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study of weak perturbations in the Sun. Ever-improving instrumenta-
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