ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Microjets in the penumbra of a sunspot

61   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Ainar Drews
 تاريخ النشر 2017
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Penumbral Microjets (PMJs) are short-lived jets found in the penumbra of sunspots, first observed in wide-band Ca H-line observations as localized brightenings, and are thought to be caused by magnetic reconnection. Earlier work on PMJs has been focused on smaller samples of by-eye selected events and case studies. It is our goal to present an automated study of a large sample of PMJs to place the basic statistics of PMJs on a sure footing and to study the PMJ Ca II 8542 Angstrom spectral profile in detail. High spatial resolution and spectrally well-sampled observations in the Ca II 8542 Angstrom line obtained from the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) are reduced by a Principle Component Analysis and subsequently used in the automated detection of PMJs using the simple learning algorithm k-Nearest Neighbour. PMJ detections were verified with co-temporal Ca H-line observations. A total of 453 tracked PMJ events were found, or 4253 PMJs detections tallied over all timeframes and a detection rate of 21 events per timestep. From these, an average length, width and lifetime of 640 km, 210 km and 90 s were obtained. The average PMJ Ca II 8542 Angstrom line profile is characterized by enhanced inner wings, often in the form of one or two distinct peaks, and a brighter line core as compared to the quiet Sun average. Average blue and red peak positions were determined at -10.4 km/s and +10.2 km/s offsets from the Ca II 8542 Angstrom line core. We found several clusters of PMJ hotspots within the sunspot penumbra, where PMJ events occur in the same general area repeatedly over time. Our results indicate smaller average PMJs sizes and longer lifetimes compared to previously published values, but with statistics still in the same orders of magnitude. The investigation and analysis of the PMJ line profiles strengthen the proposed heating of PMJs to transition region temperatures.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We describe the disappearance of a sector of sunspot penumbra and its restoring process observed in the preceding sunspot of active region NOAA 12348. The evolution of the magnetic field and the plasma flows support the idea that the penumbra forms d ue to a change of inclination of the magnetic field of the canopy. Moving magnetic features have been observed during the disintegration phase of that sector of sunspot penumbra. During the restoring phase we have not observed any magnetic flux emergence around the sunspot. The restoring process of the penumbra sector completed in about 72 hours and it was accompanied by the transition from the counter-Evershed flow to the classical Evershed flow. The inversion of photospheric spectropolarimetric measurements taken by IBIS allowed us to reconstruct how the uncombed configuration of the magnetic field forms during the new settlement of the penumbra, i.e., the vertical component of the magnetic field seems to be progressively replaced by some horizontal field lines, corresponding to the intra-spines.
Recent numerical simulations and observations of sunspots show a significant amount of opposite polarity magnetic field within the sunspot penumbra. Most of the opposite polarity field is associated with convective downflows. We present an analysis o f 3D MHD simulations through forward modeling of synthetic Stokes profiles of the Fesci 6301.5 AA~ and Fesci 6302.5 AA~ lines). The synthetic Stokes profiles are spatially and spectrally degraded considering typical instrument properties. Line bisector shifts of the Fesci 6301.5 AA~ line are used to determine line-of-sight velocities. Far wing magnetograms are constructed from the Stokes V profiles of the Fesci 6302.5 AA~ line. While we find an overall good agreement between observations and simulations, the fraction of opposite polarity magnetic field, the downflow filling factor and the opposite polarity-downflow association are strongly affected by spatial smearing and presence of strong gradients in the line-of-sight magnetic field and velocity. A significant fraction of opposite polarity magnetic field and downflows are hidden in the observations due to typical instrumental noise. Comparing simulations that differ by more than a factor of two in grid spacing we find that these quantities are robust within the simulations.
The fine-structure of magnetic field of a sunspot penumbra in the upper chromosphere is to be explored and compared to that in the photosphere. High spatial resolution spectropolarimetric observations were recorded with the 1.5-meter GREGOR telescope using the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS). The observed spectral domain includes the upper chromospheric He I triplet at 1083.0 nm and the photospheric Si I 1082.7 nm and Ca I 1083.3 nm spectral lines. The upper chromospheric magnetic field is obtained by inverting the He I triplet assuming a Milne-Eddington type model atmosphere. A height dependent inversion was applied to the Si I 1082.7 nm and Ca I 1083.3 nm lines to obtain the photospheric magnetic field. We find that the inclination of the magnetic field shows variations in the azimuthal direction both in the photosphere, but also in the upper chromosphere. The chromospheric variations remarkably well coincide with the variations in the inclination of the photospheric field and resemble the well-known spine and inter-spine structure in the photospheric layers of penumbrae. The typical peak-to-peak variations in the inclination of the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere is found to be 10-15 degree, i.e., roughly half the variation in the photosphere. In contrast, the magnetic field strength of the observed penumbra does not show variations on small spatial scales in the upper chromosphere. Thanks to the high spatial resolution observations possible with the GREGOR telescope at 1.08 microns, we find that the prominent small-scale fluctuations in the magnetic field inclination, which are a salient part of the property of sunspot penumbral photospheres, also persist in the chromosphere, although at somewhat reduced amplitudes. Such a complex magnetic configuration may facilitate penumbral chromospheric dynamic phenomena, such as penumbral micro-jets or transient bright dots.
The penumbra is ideally suited to challenge our understanding of magnetohydrodynamics. The energy transport takes place as magnetoconvection in inclined magnetic fields under the effect of strong radiative cooling at the surface. The relevant process es happen at small spatial scales. In this contribution we describe and elaborate on these small-scale inhomogeneities of a sunspot penumbra. We describe the penumbral properties inferred from imaging, spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric data, and discuss the question of how these observations can be understood in terms of proposed models and theoretical concepts.
Context. The solar chromosphere and the lower transition region is believed to play a crucial role in the heating of the solar corona. Models that describe the chromosphere (and the lower transition region), accounting for its highly dynamic and stru ctured character are, so far, found to be lacking. This is partly due to the breakdown of complete frequency redistribution in the chromospheric layers and also because of the difficulty in obtaining complete sets of observations that adequately constrain the solar atmosphere at all relevant heights. Aims. We aim to obtain semi-empirical model atmospheres that reproduce the features of the Mg II h&k line profiles that sample the middle chromosphere with focus on a sunspot. Methods. We use spectropolarimetric observations of the Ca II 8542 A spectra obtained with the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) and use NICOLE
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا