730 research outputs found
Validation of six years of SCIAMACHY carbon monoxide observations using MOZAIC CO profile measurements
This paper presents a validation study of SCanning Imaging Absorption SpectroMeter for Atmospheric CartograpHY (SCIAMACHY) carbon monoxide (CO) total column measurements from the Iterative Maximum Likelihood Method (IMLM) algorithm using vertically integrated profile aircraft measurements obtained within the MOZAIC project for the six year time period of 2003-2008. Overall we find a good agreement between SCIAMACHY and airborne measurements for both mean values also on a year-to-year basis as well as seasonal variations. Several locations show large biases that are attributed to local effects like orography and proximity of large emission sources. Differences were detected for individual years: 2003, 2004 and 2006 have larger biases than 2005, 2007 and 2008, which appear to be related to SCIAMACHY instrumental issues but require more research. Results from this study are consistent with, and complementary to, findings from a previous validation study using ground-based measurements (de Laat et al., 2010b). According to this study, the SCIAMACHY data, if individual measurements are of sufficient quality-good signal-to-noise, can be used to determine the spatial distribution and seasonal cycles of CO total columns over clean areas. Biases found over areas with strong emissions (Africa, China) could be explained by low sensitivity of the instrument in the boundary layer and users are recommended to avoid using the SCIAMACHY data while trying to quantify CO burden and/or retrieve CO emissions in such areas. © 2012 Author(s)
The cross helicity at the solar surface by simulations and observations
The quasilinear mean-field theory for driven MHD turbulence leads to the
result that the observed cross helicity may directly yield the
magnetic eddy diffusivity \eta_{T} of the quiet Sun. In order to model the
cross helicity at the solar surface, magnetoconvection under the presence of a
vertical large-scale magnetic field is simulated with the nonlinear MHD code
NIRVANA. The very robust result of the calculations is that \simeq 2
independent of the applied magnetic field amplitude. The
correlation coefficient for the cross helicity is about 10%. Of similar
robustness is the finding that the rms value of the magnetic perturbations
exceeds the mean-field amplitude (only) by a factor of five. The characteristic
helicity speed u_{\eta} as the ratio of the eddy diffusivity and the density
scale height for an isothermal sound velocity of 6.6 km/s proves to be 1 km/s
for weak fields. This value well coincides with empirical results obtained from
the data of the HINODE satellite and the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST)
providing the cross helicity component . Both simulations and
observations thus lead to a numerical value of \eta_{T} \simeq 10^12 cm^2 /s as
characteristic for the surface of the quiet Sun.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Evidence for Steady Heating: Observations of an Active Region Core with Hinode and TRACE
Previous observations have not been able to exclude the possibility that high
temperature active region loops are actually composed of many small scale
threads that are in various stages of heating and cooling and only appear to be
in equilibrium. With new observations from the EUV Imaging Spectrometer (EIS)
and X-ray Telescope (XRT) on \textit{Hinode} we have the ability to investigate
the properties of high temperature coronal plasma in extraordinary detail. We
examine the emission in the core of an active region and find three independent
lines of evidence for steady heating. We find that the emission observed in XRT
is generally steady for hours, with a fluctuation level of approximately 15% in
an individual pixel. Short-lived impulsive heating events are observed, but
they appear to be unrelated to the steady emission that dominates the active
region. Furthermore, we find no evidence for warm emission that is spatially
correlated with the hot emission, as would be expected if the high temperature
loops are the result of impulsive heating. Finally, we also find that
intensities in the "moss", the footpoints of high temperature loops, are
consistent with steady heating models provided that we account for the local
expansion of the loop from the base of the transition region to the corona. In
combination, these results provide strong evidence that the heating in the core
of an active region is effectively steady, that is, the time between heating
events is short relative to the relevant radiative and conductive cooling
times.Comment: Minor changes based on the final report from the referee; Movies are
available from the first autho
The effect of activity-related meridional flow modulation on the strength of the solar polar magnetic field
We studied the effect of the perturbation of the meridional flow in the
activity belts detected by local helioseismology on the development and
strength of the surface magnetic field at the polar caps. We carried out
simulations of synthetic solar cycles with a flux transport model, which
follows the cyclic evolution of the surface field determined by flux emergence
and advective transport by near-surface flows. In each hemisphere, an
axisymmetric band of latitudinal flows converging towards the central latitude
of the activity belt was superposed onto the background poleward meridional
flow. The overall effect of the flow perturbation is to reduce the latitude
separation of the magnetic polarities of a bipolar magnetic region and thus
diminish its contribution to the polar field. As a result, the polar field
maximum reached around cycle activity minimum is weakened by the presence of
the meridional flow perturbation. For a flow perturbation consistent with
helioseismic observations, the polar field is reduced by about 18% compared to
the case without inflows. If the amplitude of the flow perturbation depends on
the cycle strength, its effect on the polar field provides a nonlinearity that
could contribute to limiting the amplitude of a Babcock-Leighton type dynamo.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Ap
A polynomial-time algorithm for optimizing over N-fold 4-block decomposable integer programs
In this paper we generalize N-fold integer programs and two-stage integer
programs with N scenarios to N-fold 4-block decomposable integer programs. We
show that for fixed blocks but variable N, these integer programs are
polynomial-time solvable for any linear objective. Moreover, we present a
polynomial-time computable optimality certificate for the case of fixed blocks,
variable N and any convex separable objective function. We conclude with two
sample applications, stochastic integer programs with second-order dominance
constraints and stochastic integer multi-commodity flows, which (for fixed
blocks) can be solved in polynomial time in the number of scenarios and
commodities and in the binary encoding length of the input data. In the proof
of our main theorem we combine several non-trivial constructions from the
theory of Graver bases. We are confident that our approach paves the way for
further extensions
A Tale Of Two Spicules: The Impact of Spicules on the Magnetic Chromosphere
We use high-resolution observations of the Sun in Ca II H 3968 A from the
Solar Optical Telescope on Hinode to show that there are at least two types of
spicules that dominate the structure of the magnetic solar chromosphere. Both
types are tied to the relentless magnetoconvective driving in the photosphere,
but have very different dynamic properties. ``Type-I'' spicules are driven by
shock waves that form when global oscillations and convective flows leak into
the upper atmosphere along magnetic field lines on 3-7 minute timescales.
``Type-II'' spicules are much more dynamic: they form rapidly (in ~10s), are
very thin (<200km wide), have lifetimes of 10-150s (at any one height) and seem
to be rapidly heated to (at least) transition region temperatures, sending
material through the chromosphere at speeds of order 50-150 km/s. The
properties of Type II spicules suggest a formation process that is a
consequence of magnetic reconnection, typically in the vicinity of magnetic
flux concentrations in plage and network. Both types of spicules are observed
to carry Alfven waves with significant amplitudes of order 20 km/s.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for Hinode special issue of PAS
Characteristics and Evolution of the Magnetic field and Chromospheric Emission in an Active Region Core Observed by Hinode
We describe the characteristics and evolution of the magnetic field and
chromospheric emission in an active region core observed by the Solar Optical
Telescope on Hinode. Consistent with previous studies, we find that the moss is
unipolar, the spatial distribution of magnetic flux evolves slowly, and the
magnetic field is only moderately inclined. We show that the field line
inclination and horizontal component are coherent, and that the magnetic field
is mostly sheared in the inter-moss regions where the highest magnetic flux
variability is seen. Using extrapolations from SP magnetograms we show that the
magnetic connectivity in the moss is different than in the quiet Sun because
most of the magnetic field extends to significant coronal heights. The magnetic
flux, field vector, and chromospheric emission in the moss also appear highly
dynamic, but actually show only small scale variations in magnitude on
time-scales longer than the cooling times for hydrodynamic loops computed from
our extrapolations, suggesting high-frequency (continuous) heating events. Some
evidence is found for flux (Ca 2 intensity) changes on the order of 100--200 G
(DN) on time-scales of 20--30 mins that could be taken as indicative of
low-frequency heating. We find, however, that only a small fraction (10%) of
our simulated loops would be expected to cool on these time-scales, and we find
no clear evidence that the flux changes consistently produce intensity changes
in the chromosphere. The magnetic flux and chromospheric intensity in most
individual SOT pixels in the moss vary by less than ~ 20% and ~ 10%,
respectively, on loop cooling time-scales. In view of the high energy
requirements of the chromosphere, we suggest that these variations could be
sufficient for the heating of `warm' EUV loops, but that the high basal levels
may be more important for powering the hot core loops rooted in the moss.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 16 pages, 20 figures. Abridged abstract (original is
in PDF file). Figures 1 & 2 are reduced resolution to meet size limit
The evaluation of SCIAMACHY CO and CH_4 scientific data products, using ground-based FTIR measurements
In the framework of the European EVERGREEN project, three scientific algorithms, namely WFM-DOAS, IMAPDOAS
and IMLM, have been developed to retrieve the total column amounts of key atmospheric trace gases including
CO and CH_4 from SCIAMACHY nadir observations in its near-infrared channels. These channels offer the capability to
detect trace gases in the planetary boundary layer, potentially making the associated retrieval products suited for
regional source-sink studies.
The retrieval products of these three algorithms, in their present status of development, have been compared to
independent data from a ground-based quasi-global network of Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometers, for the
year 2003. Comparisons have been made for individual data, as well as for monthly averages. To maximize the number
of coincidences that satisfy the temporal and spatial collocation criteria, the individual SCIAMACHY data points have
been compared with a 3rd order polynomial interpolation of the ground-based data with time. Particular attention has
been paid to the question whether the products reproduce correctly the seasonal and latitudinal variabilities of the target
species. We present an overall assessment of the data quality of the currently available latest versions of the CO and CH4
total column products from the three scientific retrieval algorithms
Observations of quasi-periodic phenomena associated with a large blowout solar jet
A variety of periodic phenomena have been observed in conjunction with large
solar jets. We aim to find further evidence for {(quasi-)}periodic behaviour in
solar jets and determine what the periodic behaviour can tell us about the
excitation mechanism and formation process of the large solar jet. Using the
304 {\AA} (He-II), 171 {\AA} (Fe IX), 193 {\AA} (Fe XII/XXIV) and 131 {\AA} (Fe
VIII/XXI) filters on-board the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO) Atmospheric
Imaging Assembly (AIA), we investigate the intensity oscillations associated
with a solar jet. Evidence is provided for multiple magnetic reconnection
events occurring between a pre-twisted, closed field and open field lines.
Components of the jet are seen in multiple SDO/AIA filters covering a wide
range of temperatures, suggesting the jet can be classified as a blowout jet.
Two bright, elongated features are observed to be co-spatial with the large
jet, appearing at the jet's footpoints. Investigation of these features reveal
they are defined by multiple plasma ejections. The ejecta display
(quasi-)periodic behaviour on timescales of 50 s and have rise velocities of
40-150 km\,s along the open field lines. Due to the suggestion that the
large jet is reconnection-driven and the observed properties of the ejecta, we
further propose that these ejecta events are similar to type-II spicules. The
bright features also display (quasi)-periodic intensity perturbations on the
timescale of 300 s. Possible explanations for the existence of the
(quasi-)periodic perturbations in terms of jet dynamics and the response of the
transition region are discussed.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics - In Prin
On mesogranulation, network formation and supergranulation
We present arguments which show that in all likelihood mesogranulation is not
a true scale of solar convection but the combination of the effects of both
highly energetic granules, which give birth to strong positive divergences
(SPDs) among which we find exploders, and averaging effects of data processing.
The important role played by SPDs in horizontal velocity fields appears in the
spectra of these fields where the scale 4 Mm is most energetic; we
illustrate the effect of averaging with a one-dimensional toy model which shows
how two independent non-moving (but evolving) structures can be transformed
into a single moving structure when time and space resolution are degraded.
The role of SPDs in the formation of the photospheric network is shown by
computing the advection of floating corks by the granular flow. The coincidence
of the network bright points distribution and that of the corks is remarkable.
We conclude with the possibility that supergranulation is not a proper scale of
convection but the result of a large-scale instability of the granular flow,
which manifests itself through a correlation of the flows generated by SPDs.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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