17 research outputs found
Helium Emissions Observed in Ground-Based Spectra of Solar Prominences
The only prominent line of singly ionized helium in the visible spectral
range, helium-II 4686 A, is observed together with the helium-I 5015 A singlet
and the helium-I 4471 A triplet line in solar prominences. The sodium emission,
NaD2, is used as a tracer for helium-II emissions which are sufficiently bright
to exceed the noise level near 10^-6 of the disk-center intensity. The so
selected prominences are characterized by small non-thermal line broadening and
almost absent velocity shifts, yielding narrow line profiles without wiggles.
The reduced widths [Delta(lambda_D) / lambda] of helium-II 4686 A are 1.5 times
broader than those of helium-I 4471 A triplet and 1.65 times broader than those
of helium-I 5015 A singlet. This indicates that the helium lines originate in a
prominence--corona transition region with outwards increasing temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure, 3 table
Spatial variations of the SrI 4607\AA scattering polarization signals at subgranular scale observed with ZIMPOL at GREGOR telescope
Sr I 4607\AA spectral line shows one of the strongest scattering polarization
signals in the visible solar spectrum. The amplitudes of these signals are
expected to vary at granular spatial scales. This variation can be due to
changes in the magnetic field intensity and orientation (Hanle effect) as well
as due to spatial and temporal variations in the plasma properties. Measuring
the spatial variation of such polarization signal would allow us to study the
properties of the magnetic fields at subgranular region. But, the observations
are challenging since both high spatial resolution and high spectropolarimetric
sensitivity are required at the same time. To the aim of measuring these
spatial variations at granular scale, we carried out a spectro-polarimetric
measurement with the Zurich IMaging POLarimeter (ZIMPOL), at the GREGOR solar
telescope at different limb distances on solar disk. Our results show a spatial
variation of scattering linear polarization signals in Sr I 4607\AA line at the
granular scale at every , starting from 0.2 to 0.8. The correlation
between the polarization signal amplitude and the continuum intensity imply
statistically that the scattering polarization is higher at the granular
regions than in the intergranular lanes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceeding of Third Meeting of the Italian Solar
and Heliospheric Community, OCTOBER 28-31, 2018 - TURI
Characterization of a thinned back illuminated MIMOSA V sensor as a visible light camera
Abstract This paper reports the measurements that have been performed both in the Silicon Detector Laboratory at the University of Insubria (Como, Italy) and at the Instituto Ricerche SOlari Locarno (IRSOL) to characterize a CMOS pixel particle detector as a visible light camera. The CMOS sensor has been studied in terms of Quantum Efficiency in the visible spectrum, image blooming and reset inefficiency in saturation condition. The main goal of these measurements is to prove that this kind of particle detector can also be used as an ultra fast, 100% fill factor visible light camera in solar physics experiments
Observations on spatial variations of the Sr~{\sc i} 4607~\AA~scattering polarization signals at different limb distances with ZIMPOL
The Sr~{\sc i} 4607~\AA\ spectral line shows one of the strongest scattering
polarization signals in the visible solar spectrum. The amplitude of this
polarization signal is expected to vary at granular spatial scales, due to the
combined action of the Hanle effect and the local anisotropy of the radiation
field. Observing these variations would be of great interest because it would
provide precious information on the small-scale activity of the solar
photosphere. At present, few detections of such spatial variations have been
reported. This is due to the difficulty of these measurements, which require
combining high spatial ( 0.1"), spectral ( 20 m\AA), and temporal
resolution (< 1 min) with increased polarimetric sensitivity (
10). Aims. We aim to detect spatial variations at granular scales of
the scattering polarization peak of the Sr~{\sc i} 4607~\AA\ line at different
limb distances, and to study the correlation with the continuum intensity.
Methods.Using the Zurich IMaging POLarimeter (ZIMPOL) system mounted at the
GREGOR telescope and spectrograph in Tenerife, Spain, we carried out
spectro-polarimetric measurements to obtain the four Stokes parameters in the
Sr~{\sc i} line at different limb distances, from to , on
the solar disk. Results.Spatial variations of the scattering polarization
signal in the Sr~{\sc i} 4607~\AA\ line, with a spatial resolution of about
0.66", are clearly observed at every . The spatial scale of these
variations is comparable to the granular size. A statistical analysis reveals
that the linear scattering polarization amplitude in this Sr~{\sc i} spectral
line is positively correlated with the intensity in the continuum,
corresponding to the granules, at every .Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&