21,656 research outputs found
Zeeman-Tomography of the Solar Photosphere -- 3-Dimensional Surface Structures Retrieved from Hinode Observations
AIMS :The thermodynamic and magnetic field structure of the solar photosphere
is analyzed by means of a novel 3-dimensional spectropolarimetric inversion and
reconstruction technique. METHODS : On the basis of high-resolution,
mixed-polarity magnetoconvection simulations, we used an artificial neural
network (ANN) model to approximate the nonlinear inverse mapping between
synthesized Stokes spectra and the underlying stratification of atmospheric
parameters like temperature, line-of-sight (LOS) velocity and LOS magnetic
field. This approach not only allows us to incorporate more reliable physics
into the inversion process, it also enables the inversion on an absolute
geometrical height scale, which allows the subsequent combination of individual
line-of-sight stratifications to obtain a complete 3-dimensional reconstruction
(tomography) of the observed area. RESULTS : The magnetoconvection simulation
data, as well as the ANN inversion, have been properly processed to be
applicable to spectropolarimetric observations from the Hinode satellite. For
the first time, we show 3-dimensional tomographic reconstructions (temperature,
LOS velocity, and LOS magnetic field) of a quiet sun region observed by Hinode.
The reconstructed area covers a field of approximately 12000 by 12000 km and a
height range of 510 km in the photosphere. An enormous variety of small and
large scale structures can be identified in the 3-D reconstructions. The
low-flux region (B_{mag} = 20G) we analyzed exhibits a number of "tube-like"
magnetic structures with field strengths of several hundred Gauss. Most of
these structures rapidly loose their strength with height and only a few larger
structures can retain a higher field strength to the upper layers of the
photosphere.Comment: accepted for A&A Letter
Detecting and quantifying stellar magnetic fields -- Sparse Stokes profile approximation using orthogonal matching pursuit
In the recent years, we have seen a rapidly growing number of stellar
magnetic field detections for various types of stars. Many of these magnetic
fields are estimated from spectropolarimetric observations (Stokes V) by using
the so-called center-of-gravity (COG) method. Unfortunately, the accuracy of
this method rapidly deteriorates with increasing noise and thus calls for a
more robust procedure that combines signal detection and field estimation. We
introduce an estimation method that provides not only the effective or mean
longitudinal magnetic field from an observed Stokes V profile but also uses the
net absolute polarization of the profile to obtain an estimate of the apparent
(i.e., velocity resolved) absolute longitudinal magnetic field. By combining
the COG method with an orthogonal-matching-pursuit (OMP) approach, we were able
to decompose observed Stokes profiles with an overcomplete dictionary of
wavelet-basis functions to reliably reconstruct the observed Stokes profiles in
the presence of noise. The elementary wave functions of the sparse
reconstruction process were utilized to estimate the effective longitudinal
magnetic field and the apparent absolute longitudinal magnetic field. A
multiresolution analysis complements the OMP algorithm to provide a robust
detection and estimation method. An extensive Monte-Carlo simulation confirms
the reliability and accuracy of the magnetic OMP approach.Comment: A&A, in press, 15 pages, 14 figure
Spot evolution on the red giant star XX Triangulum. A starspot-decay analysis based on time-series Doppler imaging
Solar spots appear to decay linearly proportional to their size. The decay
rate of solar spots is directly related to magnetic diffusivity, which itself
is a key quantity for the length of a magnetic-activity cycle. Is a linear spot
decay also seen on other stars, and is this in agreement with the large range
of solar and stellar activity cycle lengths? We investigate the evolution of
starspots on the rapidly-rotating ( 24 d) K0 giant XX
Tri, using consecutive time-series Doppler images. Our aim is to obtain a
well-sampled movie of the stellar surface over many years, and thereby detect
and quantify a starspot decay law for further comparison with the Sun. We
obtained continuous high-resolution and phase-resolved spectroscopy with the
1.2-m robotic STELLA telescope on Tenerife over six years. For each observing
season, we obtained between 5 to 7 independent Doppler images, one per stellar
rotation, making up a total of 36 maps. To quantify starspot area decay and
growth, we match the observed images with simplified spot models based on a
Monte Carlo approach. It is shown that the surface of XX Tri is covered with
large high-latitude and even polar spots and with occasional small equatorial
spots. Just over the course of six years, we see a systematically changing spot
distribution with various timescales and morphology, such as spot fragmentation
and spot merging as well as spot decay and formation. An average linear decay
of = 0.022 0.002 SH/day is inferred. We found evidence of an
active longitude in phase toward the (unseen) companion star. Furthermore, we
detect a weak solar-like differential rotation with a surface shear of
= 0.016 0.003. From the decay rate, we determine a turbulent diffusivity
of = (6.3 0.5) 10 cm/s and predict a
magnetic activity cycle of 26 6 years
A fast method for Stokes profile synthesis -- Radiative transfer modeling for ZDI and Stokes profile inversion
The major challenges for a fully polarized radiative transfer driven approach
to Zeeman-Doppler imaging are still the enormous computational requirements. In
every cycle of the iterative interplay between the forward process (spectral
synthesis) and the inverse process (derivative based optimization) the Stokes
profile synthesis requires several thousand evaluations of the polarized
radiative transfer equation for a given stellar surface model. To cope with
these computational demands and to allow for the incorporation of a full Stokes
profile synthesis into Doppler- and Zeeman-Doppler imaging applications as well
as into large scale solar Stokes profile inversions, we present a novel fast
and accurate synthesis method for calculating local Stokes profiles. Our
approach is based on artificial neural network models, which we use to
approximate the complex non-linear mapping between the most important
atmospheric parameters and the corresponding Stokes profiles. A number of
specialized artificial neural networks, are used to model the functional
relation between the model atmosphere, magnetic field strength, field
inclination, and field azimuth, on one hand and the individual components
(I,Q,U,V) of the Stokes profiles, on the other hand. We performed an extensive
statistical evaluation and show that our new approach yields accurate local as
well as disk-integrated Stokes profiles over a wide range of atmospheric
conditions. The mean rms errors for the Stokes I and V profiles are well below
0.2% compared to the exact numerical solution. Errors for Stokes Q and U are in
the range of 1%. Our approach does not only offer an accurate approximation to
the LTE polarized radiative transfer it, moreover, accelerates the synthesis by
a factor of more than 1000.Comment: A&A, in pres
The Magnetic Topology of the Weak-Lined T Tauri Star V410 - A Simultaneous Temperature and Magnetic Field Inversion
We present a detailed temperature and magnetic investigation of the T Tauri
star V410 Tau by means of a simultaneous Doppler- and Zeeman-Doppler Imaging.
Moreover we introduce a new line profile reconstruction method based on a
singular value decomposition (SVD) to extract the weak polarized line profiles.
One of the key features of the line profile reconstruction is that the SVD line
profiles are amenable to radiative transfer modeling within our Zeeman-Doppler
Imaging code iMap. The code also utilizes a new iterative regularization scheme
which is independent of any additional surface constraints. To provide more
stability a vital part of our inversion strategy is the inversion of both
Stokes I and Stokes V profiles to simultaneously reconstruct the temperature
and magnetic field surface distribution of V410 Tau. A new image-shear analysis
is also implemented to allow the search for image and line profile distortions
induced by a differential rotation of the star. The magnetic field structure we
obtain for V410 Tau shows a good spatial correlation with the surface
temperature and is dominated by a strong field within the cool polar spot. The
Zeeman-Doppler maps exhibit a large-scale organization of both polarities
around the polar cap in the form of a twisted bipolar structure. The magnetic
field reaches a value of almost 2 kG within the polar region but smaller fields
are also present down to lower latitudes. The pronounced non-axisymmetric field
structure and the non-detection of a differential rotation for V410 Tau
supports the idea of an underlying -type dynamo, which is predicted
for weak-lined T Tauri stars.Comment: Accepted for A&A, 18 pages, 10 figure
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