23 research outputs found
Magnetic fields of opposite polarity in sunspot penumbrae
Context. A significant part of the penumbral magnetic field returns below the
surface in the very deep photosphere. For lines in the visible, a large portion
of this return field can only be detected indirectly by studying its imprints
on strongly asymmetric and three-lobed Stokes V profiles. Infrared lines probe
a narrow layer in the very deep photosphere, providing the possibility of
directly measuring the orientation of magnetic fields close to the solar
surface.
Aims. We study the topology of the penumbral magnetic field in the lower
photosphere, focusing on regions where it returns below the surface.
Methods. We analyzed 71 spectropolarimetric datasets from Hinode and from the
GREGOR infrared spectrograph. We inferred the quality and polarimetric accuracy
of the infrared data after applying several reduction steps. Techniques of
spectral inversion and forward synthesis were used to test the detection
algorithm. We compared the morphology and the fractional penumbral area covered
by reversed-polarity and three-lobed Stokes V profiles for sunspots at disk
center. We determined the amount of reversed-polarity and three-lobed Stokes V
profiles in visible and infrared data of sunspots at various heliocentric
angles. From the results, we computed center-to-limb variation curves, which
were interpreted in the context of existing penumbral models.
Results. Observations in visible and near-infrared spectral lines yield a
significant difference in the penumbral area covered by magnetic fields of
opposite polarity. In the infrared, the number of reversed-polarity Stokes V
profiles is smaller by a factor of two than in the visible. For three-lobed
Stokes V profiles the numbers differ by up to an order of magnitude.Comment: 11 pages 10 figures plus appendix (2 pages 3 figures). Accepted as
part of the A&A special issue on the GREGOR solar telescop
Two-dimensional spectroscopic observations of chromospheric oscillations
The oscillatory behaviour of the solar chromosphere was studied from observations of a quiet region at disk centre using various diagnostic tools. The two-dimensional spectrometer in the Vacuum Tower Telescope/Tenerife (Spain) served to obtain a spatially highly resolved time series of "white-light" images and narrow-band filtergrams in the Na D-2 line. With a tunable Fabry-Perot interferometer, this line was scanned taking 30 images (i.e. a "scan") around the line core with wavelength steps of 30 m Angstrom and a spectral resolution of about 200000. From these images, line profiles were derived for every pixel in. the field of view. With each such narrow-band scan, a scan of '"white-light" images was taken strictly simultaneously. The whole time series comprises (2x) 128 scans. Every 56 s, a new pair of scans was started with two CCDs, thus the observation covers nearly two hours. Finally, after correlation and other reduction procedures, a field size of 69." 4 x 50." 4 remained with 0." 2/pixel on the CCD-chips. In the data reduction, new images were created representing the minimum intensity (I) of each line profile in the field of view, and also velocity (V) maps (derived from the Doppler shifts of the line profiles) for all 128 scans. From these images, power spectra and diagnostic diagrams were computed. In the subsequent analysis, a distinction between network and intra-network regions was made where this seemed appropriate. One- and two-dimensional (V-I) phase and coherence spectra were analysed with regard to oscillations and to the nature of the waves leaving their marks in these diagrams. Several noteworthy results also raised the question of the actual line formation height of Na D-2, among them being the non-detection of a chromospheric eigenmode. While an explanation for a conspicuous 70 degrees plateau in a small region of the phase spectra already exists, the suspected reason behind the decreasing phase difference from about -60 degrees for the f-mode down to similar to -120 degrees for higher modes is still subject to some speculation. Moreover, the data gave evidence of gravity waves, probably discovered for the first time in a V-I phase spectrum of Na D-2
Two-dimensional speckle spectroscopy of H alpha features
In May 2002, the solar chromosphere was observed with a two-dimensional spectrometer which is mounted in the German Vacuum Tower Telescope (VTT) at the Observatorio del Teide/Tenerife. The aim of this observation was to investigate the fine structure of the solar chromosphere seen in Halpha..We took narrow-band filtergrams (Deltalambda approximate to 72 mAngstrom) by scanning through this line. broad-band images taken strictly simultaneously with the narrow-band filtergrams were restored by speckle methods. The instantaneous optical transfer function from this restoration procedure was used for the reconstruction of the narrow-band images. Some results of this high spatial resolution observation are presented below