304 research outputs found
Twisted flux tube emergence from the convection zone to the corona
3D numerical simulations of a horizontal magnetic flux tube emergence with
different twist are carried out in a computational domain spanning the upper
layers of the convection zone to the lower corona. We use the Oslo Staggered
Code to solve the full MHD equations with non-grey and non-LTE radiative
transfer and thermal conduction along the magnetic field lines. The emergence
of the magnetic flux tube input at the bottom boundary into a weakly magnetized
atmosphere is presented. The photospheric and chromospheric response is
described with magnetograms, synthetic images and velocity field distributions.
The emergence of a magnetic flux tube into such an atmosphere results in varied
atmospheric responses. In the photosphere the granular size increases when the
flux tube approaches from below. In the convective overshoot region some 200km
above the photosphere adiabatic expansion produces cooling, darker regions with
the structure of granulation cells. We also find collapsed granulation in the
boundaries of the rising flux tube. Once the flux tube has crossed the
photosphere, bright points related with concentrated magnetic field, vorticity,
high vertical velocities and heating by compressed material are found at
heights up to 500km above the photosphere. At greater heights in the magnetized
chromosphere, the rising flux tube produces a cool, magnetized bubble that
tends to expel the usual chromospheric oscillations. In addition the rising
flux tube dramatically increases the chromospheric scale height, pushing the
transition region and corona aside such that the chromosphere extends up to 6Mm
above the photosphere. The emergence of magnetic flux tubes through the
photosphere to the lower corona is a relatively slow process, taking of order 1
hour.Comment: 53 pages,79 figures, Submitted to Ap
Small-scale magnetic flux emergence in the quiet Sun
Small bipolar magnetic features are observed to appear in the interior of
individual granules in the quiet Sun, signaling the emergence of tiny magnetic
loops from the solar interior. We study the origin of those features as part of
the magnetoconvection process in the top layers of the convection zone. Two
quiet-Sun magnetoconvection models, calculated with the
radiation-magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Bifrost code and with domain stretching
from the top layers of the convection zone to the corona, are analyzed. Using
3D visualization as well as a posteriori spectral synthesis of Stokes
parameters, we detect the repeated emergence of small magnetic elements in the
interior of granules, as in the observations. Additionally, we identify the
formation of organized horizontal magnetic sheets covering whole granules. Our
approach is twofold, calculating statistical properties of the system, like
joint probability density functions (JPDFs), and pursuing individual events via
visualization tools. We conclude that the small magnetic loops surfacing within
individual granules in the observations may originate from sites at or near the
downflows in the granular and mesogranular levels, probably in the first 1 or
1.5 Mm below the surface. We also document the creation of granule-covering
magnetic sheet-like structures through the sideways expansion of a small
subphotospheric magnetic concentration picked up, and pulled out of the
interior, by a nascent granule. The sheet-like structures we found in the
models may match the recent observations of Centeno et al. (2017).Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, Published in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Ultrafast all-optical control of the magnetization in magnetic dielectrics
The purpose of this review is to summarize the recent progress on laser-induced magnetization
dynamics in magnetic dielectrics. Due to the slow phonon–magnon interaction in these materials,
direct thermal effects of the laser excitation can only be seen on the time scale of almost a nanosecond
and thus are clearly distinguished from the ultrafast nonthermal effects. However, via the
crystal field, laser pulses are shown to indirectly modify the magnetic anisotropy in rare-earth
orthoferrites and lead to the spin reorientation within a few picoseconds. More interesting, however,
are the direct nonthermal effects of light on spin systems. We demonstrate coherent optical
control of the magnetization in ferrimagnetic garnet films on a femtosecond time scale through a
combination of two different ultrafast and nonthermal photomagnetic effects and by employing
multiple pump pulses. Linearly polarized laser pulses are shown to create a long-lived modification
of the magnetocrystalline anisotropy via optically induced electron transfer between nonequivalent
ion sites. In addition, circularly polarized pulses are shown to act as strong transient magnetic
field pulses originating from the nonabsorptive inverse Faraday effect. An all-optical scheme of excitation
and detection of different antiferromagnetic resonance modes with frequencies of up to
500 GHz will be discussed as well. The reported effects open new and exciting possibilities for
ultrafast manipulation of spins by light, and provide new insight into the physics of magnetism on
ultrafast time scales
Floating stones off El Hierro, Canary Islands: xenoliths of pre-island sedimentary origin in the early products of the October 2011 eruption
The eruption that started off the south coast of El Hierro, Canary Islands, in October 2011 has emitted intriguing eruption products found floating in the sea. These specimens appeared as floating volcanic "bombs" that have in the meantime been termed "restingolites" (after the close-by village of La Restinga) and exhibit cores of white and porous pumice-like material. Currently the nature and origin of these "floating stones" is vigorously debated among researchers, with important implications for the interpretation of the hazard potential of the ongoing eruption. The "restingolites" have been proposed to be either (i) juvenile high-silica magma (e.g. rhyolite), (ii) remelted magmatic material (trachyte), (iii) altered volcanic rock, or (iv) reheated hyaloclastites or zeolite from the submarine slopes of El Hierro. Here, we provide evidence that supports yet a different conclusion. We have collected and analysed the structure and composition of samples and compared the results to previous work on similar rocks found in the archipelago. Based on their high silica content, the lack of igneous trace element signatures, and the presence of remnant quartz crystals, jasper fragments and carbonate relicts, we conclude that "restingolites" are in fact xenoliths from pre-island sedimentary rocks that were picked up and heated by the ascending magma causing them to partially melt and vesiculate. They hence represent messengers from depth that help us to understand the interaction between ascending magma and crustal lithologies in the Canary Islands as well as in similar Atlantic islands that rest on sediment/covered ocean crust (e.g. Cape Verdes, Azores). The occurrence of these "restingolites" does therefore not indicate the presence of an explosive high-silica magma that is involved in the ongoing eruption
Field-driven femtosecond magnetization dynamics induced by ultrastrong coupling to THz transients
Controlling ultrafast magnetization dynamics by a femtosecond laser is
attracting interest both in fundamental science and industry because of the
potential to achieve magnetic domain switching at ever advanced speed. Here we
report experiments illustrating the ultrastrong and fully coherent light-matter
coupling of a high-field single-cycle THz transient to the magnetization vector
in a ferromagnetic thin film. We could visualize magnetization dynamics which
occur on a timescale of the THz laser cycle and two orders of magnitude faster
than the natural precession response of electrons to an external magnetic
field, given by the Larmor frequency. We show that for one particular
scattering geometry the strong coherent optical coupling can be described
within the framework of a renormalized Landau Lifshitz equation. In addition to
fundamentally new insights to ultrafast magnetization dynamics the coherent
interaction allows for retrieving the complex time-frequency magnetic
properties and points out new opportunities in data storage technology towards
significantly higher storage speed.Comment: 25 page
Vectorial Control of Magnetization by Light
Coherent light-matter interactions have recently extended their applications
to the ultrafast control of magnetization in solids. An important but
unrealized technique is the manipulation of magnetization vector motion to make
it follow an arbitrarily designed multi-dimensional trajectory. Furthermore,
for its realization, the phase and amplitude of degenerate modes need to be
steered independently. A promising method is to employ Raman-type nonlinear
optical processes induced by femtosecond laser pulses, where magnetic
oscillations are induced impulsively with a controlled initial phase and an
azimuthal angle that follows well defined selection rules determined by the
materials' symmetries. Here, we emphasize the fact that temporal variation of
the polarization angle of the laser pulses enables us to distinguish between
the two degenerate modes. A full manipulation of two-dimensional magnetic
oscillations is demonstrated in antiferromagnetic NiO by employing a pair of
polarization-twisted optical pulses. These results have lead to a new concept
of vectorial control of magnetization by light
The Quiet-Sun Photosphere and Chromosphere
The overall structure and the fine structure of the solar photosphere outside
active regions are largely understood, except possibly important roles of a
turbulent near-surface dynamo at its bottom, internal gravity waves at its top,
and small-scale vorticity. Classical 1D static radiation-escape modelling has
been replaced by 3D time-dependent MHD simulations that come closer to reality.
The solar chromosphere, in contrast, remains ill-understood although its
pivotal role in coronal mass and energy loading makes it a principal research
area. Its fine structure defines its overall structure, so that hard-to-observe
and hard-to-model small-scale dynamical processes are the key to understanding.
However, both chromospheric observation and chromospheric simulation presently
mature towards the required sophistication. The open-field features seem of
greater interest than the easier-to-see closed-field features.Comment: Accepted for special issue "Astrophysical Processes on the Sun" of
Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. A, ed. C. Parnell. Note: clicking on the year in a
citation opens the corresponding ADS abstract page in the browse
The role of radiative losses in the late evolution of pulse-heated coronal loops/strands
Radiative losses from optically thin plasma are an important ingredient for
modeling plasma confined in the solar corona. Spectral models are continuously
updated to include the emission from more spectral lines, with significant
effects on radiative losses, especially around 1 MK. We investigate the effect
of changing the radiative losses temperature dependence due to upgrading of
spectral codes on predictions obtained from modeling plasma confined in the
solar corona. The hydrodynamic simulation of a pulse-heated loop strand is
revisited comparing results using an old and a recent radiative losses
function. We find significant changes in the plasma evolution during the late
phases of plasma cooling: when the recent radiative loss curve is used, the
plasma cooling rate increases significantly when temperatures reach 1-2 MK.
Such more rapid cooling occurs when the plasma density is larger than a
threshold value, and therefore in impulsive heating models that cause the loop
plasma to become overdense. The fast cooling has the effect of steepening the
slope of the emission measure distribution of coronal plasmas with temperature
at temperatures lower than ~2 MK. The effects of changes in the radiative
losses curves can be important for modeling the late phases of the evolution of
pulse-heated coronal loops, and, more in general, of thermally unstable
optically thin plasmas.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publicatio
Radiative emission of solar features in the Ca II K line: comparison of measurements and models
We study the radiative emission of various types of solar features, such as
quiet Sun, enhanced network, plage, and bright plage regions, identified on
filtergrams taken in the Ca II K line. We analysed fulldisk images obtained
with the PSPT, by using three interference filters that sample the Ca II K line
with different bandpasses. We studied the dependence of the radiative emission
of disk features on the filter bandpass. We also performed a NLTE spectral
synthesis of the Ca II K line integrated over the bandpass of PSPT filters. The
synthesis was carried out by utilizing both the PRD and CRD with the most
recent set of semi empirical atmosphere models in the literature and some
earlier atmosphere models. We measured the CLV of intensity values for various
solar features identified on PSPT images and compared the results obtained with
those derived from the synthesis. We find that CRD calculations derived using
the most recent quiet Sun model, on average, reproduce the measured values of
the quiet Sun regions slightly more accurately than PRD computations with the
same model. This may reflect that the utilized atmospheric model was computed
assuming CRD. Calculations with PRD on earlier quiet Sun model atmospheres
reproduce measured quantities with a similar accuracy as to that achieved here
by applying CRD to the recent model. We also find that the median contrast
values measured for most of the identified bright features, disk positions, and
filter widths are, on average, a factor 1.9 lower than those derived from PRD
simulations performed using the recent bright feature models. The discrepancy
between measured and modeled values decreases by 12% after taking into account
straylight effects on PSPT images. PRD computations on either the most recent
or the earlier atmosphere models of bright features reproduce measurements from
plage and bright plage regions with a similar accuracy.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figures, accepted by A&
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