The existence of a turbulent small-scale solar surface dynamo is likely,
considering existing numerical and laboratory experiments, as well as
comparisons of a small-scale dynamo in MURaM simulations with Hinode
observations. We find the observed peaked probability distribution function
(PDF) from Stokes-V magnetograms is consistent with a monotonic PDF of the
actual vertical field strength. The cancellation function of the vertical flux
density from a Hinode SP observation is found to follow a self-similar power
law over two decades in length scales down to the ~200 km resolution limit.
This provides observational evidence that the scales of magnetic structuring in
the photosphere extend at least down to 20 km. From the power law, we determine
a lower bound for the true quiet-Sun mean vertical unsigned flux density of ~43
G, consistent with our numerically-based estimates that 80% or more of the
vertical unsigned flux should be invisible to Stokes-V observations at a
resolution of 200 km owing to cancellation. Our estimates significantly reduce
the order-of-magnitude discrepancy between Zeeman- and Hanle-based estimates.Comment: Proceedings of the Second Hinode Science Meeting, ASP Series 2009. 8
pages, 4 figure