85 research outputs found

    Magnetic Structure of Umbral Dots Observed with Hinode Solar Optical Telescope

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    High resolution and seeing-free spectroscopic observation of a decaying sunspot was done with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode satellite. The target was NOAA 10944 located in the west side of the solar surface from March 2 to March 4, 2007. The umbra included many umbral dots (UDs) with size of ~300 km in continuum light. We report the magnetic structures and Doppler velocity fields around UDs, based on the Milne-Eddington inversion of the two iron absorption lines at 6302 angstrom. The histograms of magnetic field strength(B), inclination angle(i), and Doppler velocity(v) of UDs showed a center-to-limb variation. Observed at disk center, UDs had (1)slightly smaller field strength (Delta B=-17 Gauss) and (2)relative blue shifts (Delta v=28 m s-1) compared to their surroundings. When the sunspot got close to the limb, UDs and their surroundings showed almost no difference in the magnetic and Doppler values. This center-to-limb variation can be understood by the formation height difference in a cusp-shaped magnetized atmosphere around UDs, due to the weakly magnetized hot gas intrusion. In addition, some UDs showed oscillatory light curves with multiple peaks around 10 min, which may indicate the presence of the oscillatory convection. We discuss our results in the frameworks of two theoretical models, the monolithic model (Schussler & Vogler 2006) and the field-free intrusion model (Spruit & Scharmer 2006).Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PAS

    Solar horizontal flow evaluation using neural network and numerical simulation with snapshot data

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    We suggest a method that evaluates the horizontal velocity in the solar photosphere with easily observable values using a combination of neural network and radiative magnetohydrodynamics simulations. All three-component velocities of thermal convection on the solar surface have important roles in generating waves in the upper atmosphere. However, the velocity perpendicular to the line of sight (LoS) is difficult to observe. To deal with this problem, the local correlation tracking (LCT) method, which employs the difference between two images, has been widely used, but LCT has several disadvantages. We develop a method that evaluates the horizontal velocity from a snapshot of the intensity and the LoS velocity with a neural network. We use data from numerical simulations for training the neural network. While two consecutive intensity images are required for LCT, our network needs just one intensity image at only a specific moment for input. From these input array, our network outputs a same-size array of two-component velocity field. With only the intensity data, the network achieves a high correlation coefficient between the simulated and evaluated velocities of 0.83. In addition, the network performance can be improved when we add LoS velocity for input, enabling achieving a correlation coefficient of 0.90. Our method is also applied to observed data.Comment: 13 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in pas

    The Solar Internetwork. II. Magnetic Flux Appearance and Disappearance Rates

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    Small-scale internetwork magnetic fields are important ingredients of the quiet Sun. In this paper we analyze how they appear and disappear on the solar surface. Using high resolution Hinode magnetograms, we follow the evolution of individual magnetic elements in the interior of two supergranular cells at the disk center. From up to 38 hr of continuous measurements, we show that magnetic flux appears in internetwork regions at a rate of 120±3120\pm3 Mx cm−2^{-2} day−1^{-1} (3.7±0.4×10243.7 \pm 0.4 \times 10^{24} Mx day−1^{-1} over the entire solar surface). Flux disappears from the internetwork at a rate of 125±6125 \pm 6 Mx cm−2^{-2} day−1^{-1} (3.9±0.5×10243.9\pm 0.5 \times 10^{24} Mx day−1^{-1}) through fading of magnetic elements, cancellation between opposite-polarity features, and interactions with network patches, which converts internetwork elements into network features. Most of the flux is lost through fading and interactions with the network, at nearly the same rate of about 50 Mx cm−2^{-2} day−1^{-1}. Our results demonstrate that the sources and sinks of internetwork magnetic flux are well balanced. Using the instantaneous flux appearance and disappearance rates, we successfully reproduce the time evolution of the total unsigned flux in the two supergranular cells.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Accepted in ApJ. An animation of the right panel of Figure 1 is available at http://spg.iaa.es/pub/downloads/gosic/figure1_right_panel.ta

    Spectral Signatures of Penumbral Transients

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    In this work we investigate the properties of penumbral transients observed in the upper photospheric and chromospheric region above a sunspot penumbra using two-dimensional spectroscopic observations of the Ca II 854.21 nm line with a 5 s cadence. In our 30 minutes of observations, we identify several penumbral-micro jets (PMJs) with cotemporal observations from Dunn Solar Telescope/IBIS and Hinode/SOT. We find that the line profiles of these PMJ events show emission in the two wings of the line (±0.05 nm), but little modification of the line core. These are reminiscent of the line profiles of Ellerman bombs observed in plage and network regions. Furthermore, we find evidence that some PMJ events have a precursor phase starting 1 minute prior to the main brightening that might indicate initial heating of the plasma prior to an acoustic or bow shock event. With the IBIS data, we also find several other types of transient brightenings with timescales of less than 1 minute that are not clearly seen in the Hinode/SOT data. The spectral profiles and other characteristics of these events are significantly different from those of PMJs. The different appearances of all these transients are an indicator of the general complexity of themore » chromospheric magnetic field and underscore the highly dynamic behavior above sunspots. It also highlights the care that is needed in interpreting broadband filter images of chromospheric lines, which may conceal very different spectral profiles, and the underlying physical mechanisms at work.« les

    Can High Frequency Acoustic Waves Heat the Quiet Sun Chromosphere?

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    We use Hinode/SOT Ca II H-line and blue continuum broadband observations to study the presence and power of high frequency acoustic waves at high spatial resolution. We find that there is no dominant power at small spatial scales; the integrated power using the full resolution of Hinode (0.05'' pixels, 0.16'' resolution) is larger than the power in the data degraded to 0.5'' pixels (TRACE pixel size) by only a factor of 1.2. At 20 mHz the ratio is 1.6. Combining this result with the estimates of the acoustic flux based on TRACE data of Fossum & Carlsson (2006), we conclude that the total energy flux in acoustic waves of frequency 5-40 mHz entering the internetwork chromosphere of the quiet Sun is less than 800 W m−2^{-2}, inadequate to balance the radiative losses in a static chromosphere by a factor of five.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ (special Hinode issue
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