Ice Giant Seismology: Prospecting for Normal Modes
- A. James Friedson
Abstract
The properties of ice-giant normal mode oscillations, including their
periods, spatial structure, stratospheric amplitudes, and relative
influence on the external gravity field, are surveyed for the purpose of
formulating the best strategy for their eventual detection. Measurement
requirements for detecting a normal mode's periodic pressure and
temperature variations, including a possible stratospheric signal, and
its effect on the external gravity field, are discussed in terms of its
radial velocity amplitude at the 1-bar pressure level. It is found that
for reasonable amplitudes, detection of the pressure and temperature
variations of ice-giant normal modes presents an extraordinary technical
challenge. The prospects for detecting their gravitational influence on
an orbiting spacecraft are more promising, with requirements that lie
within the range of current technology.25 Dec 2020Published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences volume 378 issue 2187 on pages 20190475. 10.1098/rsta.2019.0475