362 research outputs found
Hanle effect in the CN violet system with LTE modeling
Weak entangled magnetic fields with mixed polarity occupy the main part of
the quiet Sun. The Zeeman effect diagnostics fails to measure such fields
because of cancellation in circular polarization. However, the Hanle effect
diagnostics, accessible through the second solar spectrum, provides us with a
very sensitive tool for studying the distribution of weak magnetic fields on
the Sun. Molecular lines are very strong and even dominate in some regions of
the second solar spectrum. The CN system is
one of the richest and most promising systems for molecular diagnostics and
well suited for the application of the differential Hanle effect method. The
aim is to interpret observations of the CN
system using the Hanle effect and to obtain an estimation of the magnetic field
strength. We assume that the CN molecular layer is situated above the region
where the continuum radiation is formed and employ the single-scattering
approximation. Together with the Hanle effect theory this provides us with a
model that can diagnose turbulent magnetic fields. We have succeeded in fitting
modeled CN lines in several regions of the second solar spectrum to
observations and obtained a magnetic field strength in the range from 10--30 G
in the upper solar photosphere depending on the considered lines.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Hanle effect in the solar Ba II D2 line: a diagnostic tool for chromospheric weak magnetic fields
The physics of the solar chromosphere depends in a crucial way on its
magnetic structure. However there are presently very few direct magnetic field
diagnostics available for this region. Here we investigate the diagnostic
potential of the Hanle effect on the Ba II D2 line resonance polarization for
the determination of weak chromospheric turbulent magnetic fields......Comment: In press in astronomy and astrophysic
Origin of spatial variations of scattering polarization in the wings of the Ca {\sc i} 4227 \AA line
Polarization that is produced by coherent scattering can be modified by
magnetic fields via the Hanle effect. According to standard theory the Hanle
effect should only be operating in the Doppler core of spectral lines but not
in the wings. In contrast, our observations of the scattering polarization in
the Ca {\sc i} 4227 \AA line reveals the existence of spatial variations of the
scattering polarization throughout the far line wings. This raises the question
whether the observed spatial variations in wing polarization have a magnetic or
non-magnetic origin. A magnetic origin may be possible if elastic collisions
are able to cause sufficient frequency redistribution to make the Hanle effect
effective in the wings without causing excessive collisional depolarization, as
suggested by recent theories for partial frequency redistribution with coherent
scattering in magnetic fields. To model the wing polarization we apply an
extended version of the technique based on the "last scattering approximation".
This model is highly successful in reproducing the observed Stokes
polarization (linear polarization parallel to the nearest solar limb),
including the location of the wing polarization maxima and the minima around
the Doppler core, but it fails to reproduce the observed spatial variations of
the wing polarization in terms of magnetic field effects with frequency
redistribution. This null result points in the direction of a non-magnetic
origin in terms of local inhomogeneities (varying collisional depolarization,
radiation-field anisotropies, and deviations from a plane-parallel atmospheric
stratification).Comment: Accepted in May 2009 for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Abnormal Visuo-vestibular Interactions in Vestibular Migraine: a Cross Sectional Study
Vestibular migraine is amongst the commonest causes of episodic vertigo. Chronically, patients with vestibular migraine develop abnormal responsiveness to both vestibular and visual stimuli characterised by heightened self-motion sensitivity and visually-induced dizziness. Yet, the neural mechanisms mediating such symptoms remain unknown. We postulate that such symptoms are attributable to impaired visuo-vestibular cortical interactions, which in-turn disrupts normal vestibular function. To assess this, we investigated whether prolonged, full-field visual motion exposure, which has previously been shown to modulate visual cortical excitability in both healthy individuals and avestibular patients, could disrupt vestibular ocular reflex (VOR) and vestibular-perceptual thresholds of self-motion during rotations. Our findings reveal that vestibular migraine patients exhibited abnormally elevated reflexive and perceptual vestibular thresholds at baseline. Following visual motion exposure, both reflex and perceptual thresholds were significantly further increased in vestibular migraine patients relative to healthy controls, migraineurs without vestibular symptoms and patients with episodic vertigo due to a peripheral inner-ear disorder. Our results provide support for the notion of altered visuo-vestibular cortical interactions in vestibular migraine, as evidenced by vestibular threshold elevation following visual motion exposure
First polarimetric measurements and modeling of the Paschen-Back effect in CaH transitions
We report the first spectropolarimetric observations and modeling of CaH
transitions in sunspots. We have detected strong polarization signals in many
CaH lines from the A-X system, and we provide the first successful fit to the
observed Stokes profiles using the previously developed theory of the
Paschen-Back effect in arbitrary electronic states of diatomic molecules and
polarized radiative transfer in molecular lines in stellar atmospheres. We
analyze the CaH Stokes profiles together with quasi-simultaneous observations
in TiO bands and conclude that CaH provides a valuable diagnostic of magnetic
fields in sunspots, starspots, cool stars, and brown dwarfs
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