43,221 research outputs found
Modeling Magnetic Field Structure of a Solar Active Region Corona using Nonlinear Force-Free Fields in Spherical Geometry
We test a nonlinear force-free field (NLFFF) optimization code in spherical
geometry using an analytical solution from Low and Lou. Several tests are run,
ranging from idealized cases where exact vector field data are provided on all
boundaries, to cases where noisy vector data are provided on only the lower
boundary (approximating the solar problem). Analytical tests also show that the
NLFFF code in the spherical geometry performs better than that in the Cartesian
one when the field of view of the bottom boundary is large, say, . Additionally, We apply the NLFFF model to an active region
observed by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the Solar
Dynamics Observatory (SDO) both before and after an M8.7 flare. For each
observation time, we initialize the models using potential field source surface
(PFSS) extrapolations based on either a synoptic chart or a flux-dispersal
model, and compare the resulting NLFFF models. The results show that NLFFF
extrapolations using the flux-dispersal model as the boundary condition have
slightly lower, therefore better, force-free and divergence-free metrics, and
contain larger free magnetic energy. By comparing the extrapolated magnetic
field lines with the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) observations by the Atmospheric
Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board SDO, we find that the NLFFF performs better
than the PFSS not only for the core field of the flare productive region, but
also for large EUV loops higher than 50 Mm.Comment: 34 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The absolute radiometric calibration of the advanced very high resolution radiometer
An increasing number of remote sensing investigations require radiometrically calibrated imagery from NOAA Advanced Very High Resolution Radiation (AVHRR) sensors. Although a prelaunch calibration is done for these sensors, there is no capability for monitoring any changes in the in-flight absolute calibration for the visible and near infrared spectral channels. Hence, the possibility of using the reflectance-based method developed at White Sands for in-orbit calibration of LANDSAT Thematic Mapper (TM) and SPOT Haute Resolution Visible (HVR) data to calibrate the AVHRR sensor was investigated. Three diffrent approaches were considered: Method 1 - ground and atmospheric measurements and reference to another calibrated satellite sensor; Method 2 - ground and atmospheric measurements with no reference to another sensor; and Method 3 - no ground and atmospheric measurements but reference to another satellite sensor. The purpose is to describe an investigation on the use of Method 2 to calibrate NOAA-9 AVHRR channels 1 and 2 with the help of ground and atmospheric measurements at Rogers (dry) Lake, Edwards Air Force Base (EAFB) in the Mojave desert of California
Chromospheric Evaporation in an X1.0 Flare on 2014 March 29 Observed with IRIS and EIS
Chromospheric evaporation refers to dynamic mass motions in flare loops as a
result of rapid energy deposition in the chromosphere. These have been observed
as blueshifts in X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) spectral lines
corresponding to upward motions at a few tens to a few hundreds of km/s. Past
spectroscopic observations have also revealed a dominant stationary component,
in addition to the blueshifted component, in emission lines formed at high
temperatures (~10 MK). This is contradictory to evaporation models predicting
predominant blueshifts in hot lines. The recently launched Interface Region
Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) provides high resolution imaging and spectroscopic
observations that focus on the chromosphere and transition region in the UV
passband. Using the new IRIS observations, combined with coordinated
observations from the EUV Imaging Spectrometer, we study the chromospheric
evaporation process from the upper chromosphere to corona during an X1.0 flare
on 2014 March 29. We find evident evaporation signatures, characterized by
Doppler shifts and line broadening, at two flare ribbons separating from each
other, suggesting that chromospheric evaporation takes place in successively
formed flaring loops throughout the flare. More importantly, we detect dominant
blueshifts in the high temperature Fe XXI line (~10 MK), in agreement with
theoretical predictions. We also find that, in this flare, gentle evaporation
occurs at some locations in the rise phase of the flare, while explosive
evaporation is detected at some other locations near the peak of the flare.
There is a conversion from gentle to explosive evaporation as the flare
evolves.Comment: ApJ in pres
The absolute radiometric calibration of the advanced very high resolution radiometer
The need for independent, redundant absolute radiometric calibration methods is discussed with reference to the Thematic Mapper. Uncertainty requirements for absolute calibration of between 0.5 and 4 percent are defined based on the accuracy of reflectance retrievals at an agricultural site. It is shown that even very approximate atmospheric corrections can reduce the error in reflectance retrieval to 0.02 over the reflectance range 0 to 0.4
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