5 research outputs found
Detection of Gravitational Redshift on the Solar Disk by Using Iodine-Cell Technique
With an aim to examine whether the predicted solar gravitational redshift can
be observationally confirmed under the influence of the convective Doppler
shift due to granular motions, we attempted measuring the absolute spectral
line-shifts on a large number of points over the solar disk based on an
extensive set of 5188-5212A region spectra taken through an iodine-cell with
the Solar Domeless Telescope at Hida Observatory. The resulting heliocentric
line shifts at the meridian line (where no rotational shift exists), which were
derived by finding the best-fit parameterized model spectrum with the observed
spectrum and corrected for the earth's motion, turned out to be weakly
position-dependent as ~ +400 m/s near the disk center and increasing toward the
limb up to ~ +600 m/s (both with a standard deviation of sigma ~ 100 m/s).
Interestingly, this trend tends to disappear when the convectiveshift due to
granular motions (~-300 m/s at the disk center and increasing toward the limb;
simulated based on the two-component model along with the empirical
center-to-limb variation) is subtracted, finally resulting in the averaged
shift of 698 m/s (sigma = 113 m/s). Considering the ambiguities involved in the
absolute wavelength calibration or in the correction due to convective Doppler
shifts (at least several tens m/s, or more likely up to <~100 m/s), we may
regard that this value is well consistent with the expected gravitational
redshift of 633 m/s.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, electronic materials as ancillary data (table3,
table 4, ReadMe); accepted for publication in Solar Physic
A View to the Future: Ultraviolet Studies of the Solar System
We discuss the status of ultraviolet knowledge of Solar System objects. We begin with a short historical survey, followed by a review of knowledge gathered so far and of existing observational assets. The survey indicates that UV observations, along with data collected in other spectral bands, are necessary and in some cases essential to understand the nature of our neighbors in the Solar System. By extension, similar observations are needed to explore the nature of extrasolar planets, to support or reject astro-biology arguments, and to compose and test scenarios for the formation and evolution of planetary systems. We propose a set of observations, describing first the necessary instrumental capabilitites to collect these and outlining what would be the expected scientific return. We identify two immediate programmatic requirements: the establishment of a mineralogic database in the ultraviolet for the characterization of planetary, ring, satellite, and minor planet surfaces, and the development and deployment of small orbital solar radiation monitors. The first would extend the methods of characterizing surfaces of atmosphere-less bodies by adding the UV segment. The latter are needed to establish a baseline against which contemporaneous UV observations of Solar System objects must be compared. We identify two types of UV missions, one appropriate for a two-meter-class telescope using almost off-the-shelf technology that could be launched in the next few years, and another for a much larger (5--20 meter class) instrument that would provide the logical follow-up after a decade of utilizing the smaller facility