Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere

One of the earliest indications of magnetic fields acting in the solar atmosphere came at the beginning of the 20th century when George Hale noted a "decided definiteness of structure" in photographs within the Hydrogen Balmer-alpha line core. Fine structure both in the chromosphere and in...

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Main Author: Schad, Thomas Anthony
Other Authors: Giacalone, Joe
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2013
Subjects:
Sun
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/301683
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3016832015-10-23T05:25:27Z Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere Schad, Thomas Anthony Giacalone, Joe Penn, Matthew J. Giacalone, Joe Penn, Matthew J. Jokipii, J. R. Randy Harvey, John McMillan, Robert infrared instrumentation magnetic fields spectropolarimetry Sun Planetary Sciences chromosphere One of the earliest indications of magnetic fields acting in the solar atmosphere came at the beginning of the 20th century when George Hale noted a "decided definiteness of structure" in photographs within the Hydrogen Balmer-alpha line core. Fine structure both in the chromosphere and in the corona result from processes that are not well understood but accepted as a consequence of the solar magnetic field. Our knowledge of this field is lacking, and until recently, the assumed relationship between fine thermal structure and the magnetic field remained untested. Here, spectropolarimetric diagnostics of fine structures in the solar chromosphere and cool corona are advanced using the infrared He I triplet at 1083 nm. Precise calibration procedures are developed for the Facility Infrared Spectropolarimeter (FIRS), recently commissioned at the Dunn Solar Telescope. Together with high-order adaptive optics, we simultaneously map fine structures while obtaining a polarimetric sensitivity of up to 2 x 10 ⁻⁴ of the incoming intensity. These instrument improvements result in the first maps of the He I polarized signatures within an active region superpenumbra, where Hale first recognized fine-structuring. Selective absorption and emission processes due to non-equilibrium optical pumping are recognized. Our interpretation, using advanced inversions of the He I triplet, provides confirmation of Hale's initial suspicion--the fine structures of the solar chromosphere are visual markers for the magnetic field. Yet, the fine chromospheric thermal structure is not matched by an equivalently fine magnetic structure. Our ability to measure this field suggests the utility of the He I triplet as an inner boundary condition for the inner heliospheric magnetic field. In the corona itself, we infer the vector properties of a catastrophically-cooled coronal loop, uniting space-based and ground-based instrumentation. We determine how fine loops are anchored in the photosphere via a narrow umbral flare, the consequence of a supersonic downflow of cooled material. A stereoscopic reconstruction as well as full-Stokes inversions of the He I measurements provide the first comparison of the 3D thermal structure and 3D magnetic structure of a fine-scaled coronal loop. 2013 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/301683 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic infrared
instrumentation
magnetic fields
spectropolarimetry
Sun
Planetary Sciences
chromosphere
spellingShingle infrared
instrumentation
magnetic fields
spectropolarimetry
Sun
Planetary Sciences
chromosphere
Schad, Thomas Anthony
Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
description One of the earliest indications of magnetic fields acting in the solar atmosphere came at the beginning of the 20th century when George Hale noted a "decided definiteness of structure" in photographs within the Hydrogen Balmer-alpha line core. Fine structure both in the chromosphere and in the corona result from processes that are not well understood but accepted as a consequence of the solar magnetic field. Our knowledge of this field is lacking, and until recently, the assumed relationship between fine thermal structure and the magnetic field remained untested. Here, spectropolarimetric diagnostics of fine structures in the solar chromosphere and cool corona are advanced using the infrared He I triplet at 1083 nm. Precise calibration procedures are developed for the Facility Infrared Spectropolarimeter (FIRS), recently commissioned at the Dunn Solar Telescope. Together with high-order adaptive optics, we simultaneously map fine structures while obtaining a polarimetric sensitivity of up to 2 x 10 ⁻⁴ of the incoming intensity. These instrument improvements result in the first maps of the He I polarized signatures within an active region superpenumbra, where Hale first recognized fine-structuring. Selective absorption and emission processes due to non-equilibrium optical pumping are recognized. Our interpretation, using advanced inversions of the He I triplet, provides confirmation of Hale's initial suspicion--the fine structures of the solar chromosphere are visual markers for the magnetic field. Yet, the fine chromospheric thermal structure is not matched by an equivalently fine magnetic structure. Our ability to measure this field suggests the utility of the He I triplet as an inner boundary condition for the inner heliospheric magnetic field. In the corona itself, we infer the vector properties of a catastrophically-cooled coronal loop, uniting space-based and ground-based instrumentation. We determine how fine loops are anchored in the photosphere via a narrow umbral flare, the consequence of a supersonic downflow of cooled material. A stereoscopic reconstruction as well as full-Stokes inversions of the He I measurements provide the first comparison of the 3D thermal structure and 3D magnetic structure of a fine-scaled coronal loop.
author2 Giacalone, Joe
author_facet Giacalone, Joe
Schad, Thomas Anthony
author Schad, Thomas Anthony
author_sort Schad, Thomas Anthony
title Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
title_short Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
title_full Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
title_fullStr Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
title_full_unstemmed Spectropolarimetry of Fine Magnetized Structures in the Upper Solar Atmosphere
title_sort spectropolarimetry of fine magnetized structures in the upper solar atmosphere
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/301683
work_keys_str_mv AT schadthomasanthony spectropolarimetryoffinemagnetizedstructuresintheuppersolaratmosphere
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