3,204 research outputs found
Asteroseismic Signatures of Stellar Magnetic Activity Cycles
Observations of stellar activity cycles provide an opportunity to study
magnetic dynamos under many different physical conditions. Space-based
asteroseismology missions will soon yield useful constraints on the interior
conditions that nurture such magnetic cycles, and will be sensitive enough to
detect shifts in the oscillation frequencies due to the magnetic variations. We
derive a method for predicting these shifts from changes in the Mg II activity
index by scaling from solar data. We demonstrate this technique on the
solar-type subgiant beta Hyi, using archival International Ultraviolet Explorer
spectra and two epochs of ground-based asteroseismic observations. We find
qualitative evidence of the expected frequency shifts and predict the optimal
timing for future asteroseismic observations of this star.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures and 1 table, MNRAS Letters accepte
Sun-like Stars Shed Light on Solar Climate Forcing
Recently published, precise stellar photometry of 72 Sun-like stars obtained
at the Fairborn Observatory between 1993 and 2017 is used to set limits on the
solar forcing of Earth's atmosphere of 4.5 W m since 1750. This
compares with the +2.2 1.1 W m IPCC estimate for anthropogenic
forcing. Three critical assumptions are made. In decreasing order of importance
they are: (a) most of the brightness variations occur within the average
time-series length of 17 years; (b) the Sun seen from the ecliptic
behaves as an ensemble of middle-aged solar-like stars; and (c) narrow-band
photometry in the Str\"omgren and bands are linearly proportional to
the total solar irradiance. Assumption (a) can best be relaxed and tested by
obtaining more photometric data of Sun-like stars, especially those already
observed. Eight stars with near-solar parameters have been observed from 1999,
and two since 1993. Our work reveals the importance of continuing and expanding
ground-based photometry, to complement expensive solar irradiance measurements
from space.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted to The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Removal of Spectro-Polarimetric Fringes by 2D Pattern Recognition
We present a pattern-recognition based approach to the problem of removal of
polarized fringes from spectro-polarimetric data. We demonstrate that 2D
Principal Component Analysis can be trained on a given spectro-polarimetric map
in order to identify and isolate fringe structures from the spectra. This
allows us in principle to reconstruct the data without the fringe component,
providing an effective and clean solution to the problem. The results presented
in this paper point in the direction of revising the way that science and
calibration data should be planned for a typical spectro-polarimetric observing
run.Comment: ApJ, in pres
Direct UV observations of the circumstellar envelope of alpha Orionis
Observations were made in the IUE LWP camera, low dispersion mode, with alpha Ori being offset various distances from the center of the Long Wavelength Large Aperture along its major axis. Signal was acquired at all offset positions and is comprised of unequal components of background/dark counts, telescope-scattered light, and scattered light emanating from the extended circumstellar shell. The star is known from optical and infrared observations to possess an extended, arc-minute sized, shell of cool material. Attempts to observe this shell with the IUE are described, although the deconvolution of the stellar signal from the telescope scattered light requires further calibration effort
Solar Atmospheric Oscillations and the Chromospheric Magnetic Topology
We investigate the oscillatory properties of the quiet solar chromosphere in
relation to the underlying photosphere, with particular regard to the effects
of the magnetic topology. We perform a Fourier analysis on a sequence of
line-of-sight velocities measured simultaneously in a photospheric (Fe I 709.0
nm) and a chromospheric line (Ca II 854.2 nm). The velocities were obtained
from full spectroscopic data acquired at high spatial resolution with the
Interferometric BIdimensional Spectrometer (IBIS). The field of view
encompasses a full supergranular cell, allowing us to discriminate between
areas with different magnetic characteristics. We show that waves with
frequencies above the acoustic cut-off propagate from the photosphere to upper
layers only in restricted areas of the quiet Sun. A large fraction of the quiet
chromosphere is in fact occupied by ``magnetic shadows'', surrounding network
regions, that we identify as originating from fibril-like structures observed
in the core intensity of the Ca II line. We show that a large fraction of the
chromospheric acoustic power at frequencies below the acoustic cut-off,
residing in the proximity of the magnetic network elements, directly propagates
from the underlying photosphere. This supports recent results arguing that
network magnetic elements can channel low-frequency photospheric oscillations
into the chromosphere, thus providing a way to input mechanical energy in the
upper layers.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure, A&A Letters in pres
Derivation of Instrument Requirements for Polarimetry using Mg, Fe, and Mn lines between 250 and 290 nm
Judge et al. (2021) recently argued that a region of the solar spectrum in
the near-UV between about 250 and 290 nm is optimal for studying magnetism in
the solar chromosphere due to an abundance of Mg II, Fe II, and Fe I lines that
sample various heights in the solar atmosphere. In this paper we derive
requirements for spectropolarimetric instruments to observe these lines. We
derive a relationship between the desired sensitivity to magnetic field and the
signal-to-noise of the measurement from the weak-field approximation of the
Zeeman effect. We find that many lines will exhibit observable polarization
signals for both longitudinal and transverse magnetic field with reasonable
amplitudes
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