173 research outputs found

    The Position of High Frequency Waves with Respect to the Granulation Pattern

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    High frequency velocity oscillations were observed in the spectral lines Fe I 543.45nm and 543.29nm, using 2D spectroscopy with a Fabry- Perot and speckle reconstruction, at the VTT in Tenerife. We investigate the radial component of waves with frequencies in the range 8 - 22mHz in the internetwork, network and a pore. We find that the occurrence of waves do not show any preference on location and are equally distributed over down-flows and up-flows, regardless of the activity of the observed area in the line of Fe I 543.45nm. The waves observed in the lower formed line of Fe I 543.29nm seem to appear preferentially over down-flows.Comment: Article has 12 pages and 7 images. It is accepted in Solar Physics Journa

    Calculation of Spectral Darkening and Visibility Functions for Solar Oscillations

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    Calculations of spectral darkening and visibility functions for the brightness oscillations of the Sun resulting from global solar oscillations are presented. This has been done for a broad range of the visible and infrared continuum spectrum. The procedure for the calculations of these functions includes the numerical computation of depth-dependent derivatives of the opacity caused by p modes in the photosphere. A radiative-transport code was used for this purpose to get the disturbances of the opacities from temperature and density fluctuations. The visibility and darkening functions are obtained for adiabatic oscillations under the assumption that the temperature disturbances are proportional to the undisturbed temperature of the photosphere. The latter assumption is the only way to explore any opacity effects since the eigenfunctions of p-mode oscillations have not been obtained so far. This investigation reveals that opacity effects have to be taken into account because they dominate the violet and infrared part of the spectrum. Because of this dominance, the visibility functions are negative for those parts of the spectrum. Furthermore, the darkening functions show a wavelength-dependent change of sign for some wavelengths owing to these opacity effects. However, the visibility and darkening functions under the assumptions used contradict the observations of global p-mode oscillations, but it is beyond doubt that the opacity effects influence the brightness fluctuations of the Sun resulting from global oscillations

    A tilted interference filter in a converging beam

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    Context. Narrow-band interference filters can be tuned toward shorter wavelengths by tilting them from the perpendicular to the optical axis. This can be used as a cheap alternative to real tunable filters, such as Fabry-P\'erot interferometers and Lyot filters. At the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope, such a setup is used to scan through the blue wing of the Ca II H line. Because the filter is mounted in a converging beam, the incident angle varies over the pupil, which causes a variation of the transmission over the pupil, different for each wavelength within the passband. This causes broadening of the filter transmission profile and degradation of the image quality. Aims. We want to characterize the properties of our filter, at normal incidence as well as at different tilt angles. Knowing the broadened profile is important for the interpretation of the solar images. Compensating the images for the degrading effects will improve the resolution and remove one source of image contrast degradation. In particular, we need to solve the latter problem for images that are also compensated for blurring caused by atmospheric turbulence. Methods. We simulate the process of image formation through a tilted interference filter in order to understand the effects. We test the hypothesis that they are separable from the effects of wavefront aberrations for the purpose of image deconvolution. We measure the filter transmission profile and the degrading PSF from calibration data. Results. We find that the filter transmission profile differs significantly from the specifications.We demonstrate how to compensate for the image-degrading effects. Because the filter tilt effects indeed appear to be separable from wavefront aberrations in a useful way, this can be done in a final deconvolution, after standard image restoration with MFBD/Phase Diversity based methods. We illustrate the technique with real data

    Twisting Flux Tubes as a cause of Micro-Flaring Activity

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    High-cadence optical observations of an H-alpha blue-wing bright point near solar AR NOAA 10794 are presented. The data were obtained with the Dunn Solar Telescope at the National Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak using a newly developed camera system, the Rapid Dual Imager. Wavelet analysis is undertaken to search for intensity-related oscillatory signatures, and periodicities ranging from 15 to 370 s are found with significance levels exceeding 95%. During two separate microflaring events, oscillation sites surrounding the bright point are observed to twist. We relate the twisting of the oscillation sites to the twisting of physical flux tubes, thus giving rise to reconnection phenomena. We derive an average twist velocity of 8.1 km/s and detect a peak in the emitted flux between twist angles of 180 and 230 degrees.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure

    Photospheric Magnetic Fields of the Trailing Sunspots in Active Region NOAA 12396

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    The solar magnetic field is responsible for all aspects of solar activity. Sunspots are the main manifestation of the ensuing solar activity. Combining high-resolution and synoptic observations has the ambition to provide a comprehensive description of the sunspot growth and decay processes. Active region NOAA 12396 emerged on 2015 August 3 and was observed three days later with the 1.5-meter GREGOR solar telescope on 2015 August 6. High-resolution spectropolarimetric data from the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) are obtained in the photospheric Si I λ\lambda 1082.7 nm and Ca I λ\lambda1083.9 nm lines, together with the chromospheric He I λ\lambda1083.0 nm triplet. These near-infrared spectropolarimetric observations were complemented by synoptic line-of-sight magnetograms and continuum images of the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) and EUV images of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in "Solar Polarization Workshop 8", ASP Proceedings, Luca Belluzzi (eds.

    Spectropolarimetric observations of an arch filament system with the GREGOR solar telescope

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    Arch filament systems occur in active sunspot groups, where a fibril structure connects areas of opposite magnetic polarity, in contrast to active region filaments that follow the polarity inversion line. We used the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) to obtain the full Stokes vector in the spectral lines Si I 1082.7 nm, He I 1083.0 nm, and Ca I 1083.9 nm. We focus on the near-infrared calcium line to investigate the photospheric magnetic field and velocities, and use the line core intensities and velocities of the helium line to study the chromospheric plasma. The individual fibrils of the arch filament system connect the sunspot with patches of magnetic polarity opposite to that of the spot. These patches do not necessarily coincide with pores, where the magnetic field is strongest. Instead, areas are preferred not far from the polarity inversion line. These areas exhibit photospheric downflows of moderate velocity, but significantly higher downflows of up to 30 km/s in the chromospheric helium line. Our findings can be explained with new emerging flux where the matter flows downward along the fieldlines of rising flux tubes, in agreement with earlier results.Comment: Proceedings 12th Potsdam Thinkshop to appear in Astronomische Nachrichte

    A retrospective of the GREGOR solar telescope in scientific literature

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    In this review, we look back upon the literature, which had the GREGOR solar telescope project as its subject including science cases, telescope subsystems, and post-focus instruments. The articles date back to the year 2000, when the initial concepts for a new solar telescope on Tenerife were first presented at scientific meetings. This comprehensive bibliography contains literature until the year 2012, i.e., the final stages of commissioning and science verification. Taking stock of the various publications in peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings also provides the "historical" context for the reference articles in this special issue of Astronomische Nachrichten/Astronomical Notes.Comment: 6 pages, 2 color figures, this is the pre-peer reviewed version of Denker et al. 2012, Astron. Nachr. 333, 81

    Biogenes Silizium in stark desilifizierten Böden unter Ölpalmenanbau auf Sumatra, Indonesien

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    Vor allem seit den 70er Jahren ist auf Sumatra (Indonesien) ein rapider FlĂ€chenverlust tropischer RegenwĂ€lder durch die Etablierung von Ölpalmenplantagen zu verzeichnen. Neben positiven Auswirkungen auf den Lebensstandard von Kleinbauern, fĂŒhrt die Intensivierung von Ölpalmenanbau zu abnehmender BiodiversitĂ€t und Bodenfruchtbarkeit sowie zur Degradation assoziierter ökosystemarer Funktionen. Bisher ist nicht bekannt, welche Auswirkungen der Anbau von Ölpalmen, die zu den Silizium-Akkumulatoren zĂ€hlen, auf den Si-Kreislauf intensiv desilifizierter Böden hat. Silizium (Si) wird in natĂŒrlichen RegenwĂ€ldern durch den Streuabbau in den Boden zurĂŒckgefĂŒhrt. Dabei stellt Si in biogener amorpher KieselsĂ€ure (BSi, z. B. in Phytolithen) eine wesentliche Quelle von pflanzenverfĂŒgbarem, gelöstem Si (DSi) dar. Die hier vorgestellte Studie zielt auf die PrĂŒfung der Hypothese ab, dass Ölpalmen durch ihren aktiven DSi-Entzug aus der Bodenlösung die Nachlieferung von DSi aus dem höchst reaktiven BSi-Pool ankurbeln, sodass dieser im Laufe der Zeit abnimmt. Diese VerĂ€nderungen des Si-Kreislaufs können langfristig zu einem Si-Verlust auf stark desilifizierten Böden unter Ölpalmenanbau fĂŒhren. Zur PrĂŒfung dieser Hypothese werden in dieser Studie Si-Pools in Oberböden von Acrisols unter Ölpalmenplantagen und tropischen Tiefland-RegenwĂ€ldern mittels der sequentiellen Si-Extraktion nach Georgiadis et al. [1] quantifiziert
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