We analyzed spectropolarimetric data from the Swedish 1-meter Solar Telescope
to investigate physical properties of small-scale magnetic cancellations in the
quiet Sun photosphere. Specifically, we looked at the full Stokes polarization
profiles along the Fe I 557.6 nm and of the Fe I 630.1 nm lines measured by
CRisp Imaging SpectroPolarimeter (CRISP) to study temporal evolution of the
line-of-sight (LOS) magnetic field during 42.5 minutes of quiet Sun evolution.
From this magnetogram sequence, we visually identified 38 cancellation events.
We then used Yet Another Feature Tracking Algorithm (YAFTA) to characterize
physical properties of these magnetic cancellations. We found on average
1.6×1016 Mx of magnetic flux cancelled in each event with an average
cancellation rate of 3.8×1014 Mx s−1. The derived cancelled flux
is associated with strong downflows, with an average speed of
VLOS≈1.1 km s−1. Our results show that the average
lifetime of each event is 9.2 minutes with an average 44.8% of initial
magnetic flux being cancelled. Our estimates of magnetic fluxes provide a lower
limit since studied magnetic cancellation events have magnetic field values
that are very close to the instrument noise level. We observed no horizontal
magnetic fields at the cancellation sites and therefore can not conclude
whether the events are associated structures that could cause magnetic
reconnection.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, 2 tables, accepted into ApJ on 06/08/202