1,096 research outputs found
Examination of artifact in vector magnetic field SDO/HMI measurements
In this paper, we came to conclusion that there is a significant systematic
error in the SDO/HMI vector magnetic data, which reveals itself in a
significant deviation of the lines of the knot magnetic fields from the radial
direction. The value of this deviation demonstrates a clear dependence on the
distance to the disk center. This paper suggests a method for correction of the
vector magnetograms that eliminates the detected systematic error.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Waves in vertically inhomogeneous dissipative atmosphere
A method of construction of solution for acoustic-gravity waves (AGW) above a
wave source, taking dissipation throughout the atmosphere into account
(Dissipative Solution above Source, DSAS), is proposed. The method is to
combine three solutions for three parts of the atmosphere: an analytical
solution for the upper isothermal part and numerical solutions for the real
non-isothermal dissipative atmosphere in the middle part and for the real
non-isothermal small dissipation atmosphere in the lower one. In this paper the
method has been carried out for the atmosphere with thermal conductivity but
without viscosity. The heights of strong dissipation and the total absorption
index in the regions of weak and average dissipation are found. For internal
gravity waves the results of test calculations for an isothermal atmosphere and
calculations for a real non-isothermal atmosphere are shown in graphical form.
An algorithm and appropriate code to calculate DSAS, taking dissipation due to
finite thermal conductivity into account throughout the atmosphere, are
developed. The results of test DSAS calculations for an everywhere isothermal
atmosphere are given. The calculation results for DSAS for the real
non-isothermal atmosphere are also presented. A method for constructing of the
2x2 Green's matrix fully taking dissipation into account and allowing to find
disturbance from some source of AGW in the atmosphere is proposed.Comment: 48 pages, 8 figure
Waveguide gravity disturbances in vertically inhomogeneous dissipative atmosphere
Trapped atmosphere waves, such as IGW waveguide modes and Lamb modes, are
described using dissipative solution above source (DSAS) (Dmitrienko and
Rudenko, 2016). Accordingly this description, the modes are disturbances
penetrating without limit in the upper atmosphere and dissipating their energy
throughout the atmosphere; leakage from a trapping region to the upper
atmosphere is taken in consideration. The DSAS results are compared to those
based on both accurate and WKB approximated dissipationless equations. It is
shown that the spatial and frequency characteristics of modes in the upper
atmosphere calculated by any of the methods are close to each other and are in
good agreement with the observed characteristics of traveling ionospheric
disturbances.Comment: 32 pages, 17 figure
Gravitational Hertz experiment with electromagnetic radiation in a strong magnetic field
Brief review of principal ideas in respect of the high frequency
gravitational radiation generated and detected in the laboratory condition is
presented. Interaction of electro-magnetic and gravitational waves into a
strong magnetic field is considered as a more promising variant of the
laboratory GW-Hertz experiment. The formulae of the direct and inverse
Gertsenshtein-Zeldovich effect are derived. Numerical estimates are given and a
discussion of a possibility of observation of these effects in a lab is carried
out.Comment: 10 pages , to be published in Physica Script
Photospheric magnetic field variations accompanying the 2011 June 7 eruptive event
From vector measurements of the photospheric magnetic field with the SDO/HMI
instrument, we studied the field variations within the 2011 June 7 eruptive
event related to the filament eruption (FE), flare, and coronal mass ejection
(CME). We analyzed the variations in modulus (B), in radial (Br) and
transversal (Bt) magnetic induction components, as well as in the field line
inclination angle ({\alpha}) to the radial direction from the Sun center were.
The conclusion is that the most probable cause for the FE onset being the
trigger related to the flares and CME, as well as for Stage 1 of the filament
dramatic acceleration, is {\guillemotleft}magnetic flux
cancellation{\guillemotright} in several sites inside and around the filament
channel. We assumed that the flare and the stage of the filament fastest
acceleration are related to a spot emergence near the south-eastern filament
footpoint, in which the field polarity and value satisfy a possibility of this
field magnetic reconnection with the field surrounding the filament. We studied
in detail the time variations in the field line inclination angles within
different sites of the eruptive event. During the filament slow emergence, a
decrease in the field line inclination angles was revealed to occur in its
channel neighboring, whereas the field line inclination angles dramatically
grew in the neutral line neighboring within the flare region after the flare
onset. The flare ribbons at all the stages of their existence are shown to be
located under the photosphere sites with the field modulus local maxima and
with minima of the field line inclination angles. We show that, near the
photospheric magnetic field polarity inversion line (PIL), the azimuth
decreases after the flare onset, which means a decrease in the angle \b{eta}
between PIL and the magnetic induction vector projection onto the sky plane
Azimuth ambiguity removal and non-linear force-free extrapolation of near-limb magnetic regions
Possibilities in principle for satisfactory removal of the 180-azimuthal
ambiguity in the transverse field of vector magnetograms and the extrapolation
of magnetic fields independently of their position on the solar disk are shown.
Revealed here is an exact correspondence between the estimated field and the
nonpotential loop structure on the limb. The Metropolis's algorithm modified to
work in spherical geometry is used to resolve the azimuthal ambiguity. Based on
a version of the optimization method from Rudenko and Myshyakov (2009), we use
corrected magnetograms as boundary conditions for magnetic field extrapolation
in the nonlinear force-free approximation
Low frequency signals of large scale GW-interferometers
Application of the large scale gravitational wave interferometers for
measurement of geophysical signals at very low frequencies is considered.
Analysis is concentrated on the mechanism of penetration of quasistatic
geophysical perturbation through the main interferometer output. It is shown
that it has a parametrical nature resulted in slow variations of the optical
transfer function of the interferometer. Geophysical modulation index is
calculated for any harmonical component of the output spectrum, but mainly for
a photon circulation frequency appeared in the case of stochastic illumination
of modes neighbour to the central resonance. Value of the effect is estimated
for different operational regimes of the device. For improvement of geophysical
signal readout a modernization of the instrument with using of two component
resonance optical pump is proposed and a correspondent calculation is carried
out. Numerical estimations for different regimes of the setup are given
together with discussion of possible application for measuring some weak
gravitational effects.Comment: 29 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
Evidence of the Relationship between the Emerging Magnetic Fields, Electric Currents, and Solar Flares Observed on May 10, 2012
We have analyzed multi-wavelength observations and magnetic-field data for
the solar flare of May 10, 2012 (04:18 UT) and have detected a sign inversion
of the signal in the line-of-sight magnetic measurements in the umbra of a
small spot. This effect is associated, at least partly, with the emergence of a
new magnetic field. Almost at the same time, a burst of hard X-rays was
recorded, and a wave in the vacuum ultraviolet (EUV) range (a "sunquake") was
generated due to the impact of the disturbance in the energy release range on
the photosphere. At the beginning of the event, a sigmoid flare was recorded,
but it did not spread, as it usually does, along the polarity inversion
(neutral) line. SDO/HMI full-vector measurements were used to extrapolate the
AR 11476 magnetic field to the corona, and the distribution of vertical
currents in the photosphere was obtained. The distribution of currents in
the active region shows that the relationship between them and the occurrence
of flares is very intricate. We have corroborated that the expected "ideal"
behavior of the current system before and after the flare (e.g., see (Sharykin
and Kosovichev, 2015)) is observed only in the sigmoid region. The results
obtained were compared with the observations of two other flares recorded in
this AR on the same day, one of which was similar to the flare under discussion
and the other was of different type. Our results confirm that the formation and
eruption of large-scale magnetic flux ropes in sigmoid flares are associated
with the shear motions in the photosphere and the emergence of twisted magnetic
tubes, as well as with the subsequent development of the torus instability.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures; corrected versio
The antenna phase center motion effect in space-based experiments for fundamental physics and astronomy
We consider the effect of phase center motion of mechanically steerable
high-gain parabolic antennas for ground-based and spacecraft-mounted antennas.
For spacecrafts on highly elliptic Earth orbits the magnitude of the effect is
as large as several mm/s in terms of the required velocity correction, both for
ground-based and spacecraft-mounted antennas. We illustrate this with real data
from the RadioAstron spacecraft and also provide results of our simulations for
the concept of a possible follow-up space very long baseline radio astronomy
mission. We also consider a specific configuration of satellite communication
links, with simultaneously operating one-way down link and two-way loop link,
pioneered by the Gravity Probe A experiment. We find that this configuration
provides for complete compensation of the phase center motion effect due to the
onboard antenna and significant compensation of that due to the ground antenna.
This result is important for future space-based fundamental physics
experiments, primarily those concerned with studies of gravity
A Challenging Solar Eruptive Event of 18 November 2003 and the Causes of the 20 November Geomagnetic Superstorm. III. Catastrophe of the Eruptive Filament at a Magnetic Null Point and Formation of an Opposite-Handedness CME
Our analysis in Papers I and II (Grechnev et al., 2014, Solar Phys. 289, 289
and 1279) of the 18 November 2003 solar event responsible for the 20 November
geomagnetic superstorm has revealed a complex chain of eruptions. In
particular, the eruptive filament encountered a topological discontinuity
located near the solar disk center at a height of about 100 Mm, bifurcated, and
transformed into a large cloud, which did not leave the Sun. Concurrently, an
additional CME presumably erupted close to the bifurcation region. The
conjectures about the responsibility of this compact CME for the superstorm and
its disconnection from the Sun are confirmed in Paper IV (Grechnev et al.,
Solar Phys., submitted), which concludes about its probable spheromak-like
structure. The present paper confirms the presence of a magnetic null point
near the bifurcation region and addresses the origin of the magnetic helicity
of the interplanetary magnetic clouds and their connection to the Sun. We find
that the orientation of a magnetic dipole constituted by dimmed regions with
the opposite magnetic polarities away from the parent active region
corresponded to the direction of the axial field in the magnetic cloud, while
the pre-eruptive filament mismatched it. To combine all of the listed findings,
we come to an intrinsically three-dimensional scheme, in which a spheromak-like
eruption originates via the interaction of the initially unconnected magnetic
fluxes of the eruptive filament and pre-existing ones in the corona. Through a
chain of magnetic reconnections their positive mutual helicity was transformed
into the self-helicity of the spheromak-like magnetic cloud.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in Solar Physics. The
final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11207-014-0536-
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