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Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Seismology of the Solar Atmosphere HELAS Roadmap Workshop, OCA Nice Wolfgang.

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Presentation on theme: "Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Seismology of the Solar Atmosphere HELAS Roadmap Workshop, OCA Nice Wolfgang."— Presentation transcript:

1 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Seismology of the Solar Atmosphere HELAS Roadmap Workshop, OCA Nice Wolfgang Finsterle, PMOD/WRC, Davos, Switzerland

2 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Seismology of the Solar Atmosphere ● Conceptual ideas  Traveling waves  Wave travel times  Many different types of waves (MAG, Alfvén, etc.) ● Techniques  Multi-height observations  “Doppler”-grams  Cross-correlation analysis ● Scientific potential  Dispersion relation of the solar atmosphere  Diagnostics of magnetic fields  Chromospheric heating

3 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere The Atmospheric Wave Field ● Solar eigenmodes oscillate in phase at all heights in the solar atmosphere ● Traveling waves produce a relative phase shift which is characteristic to the observation height and depends on the sound speed structure

4 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Acoustic Probing of the Sun's Lower Atmosphere ● By cross-correlating the wave fields at different heights, we can estimate the wave paths and sound speed between the observed heights ● The results naturally link to the solar interior, where seismic models are well established ● Sound waves interact with magnetic fields (absorption, wave conversion/transmission)

5 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Basic Model for Sound Waves observe Waves propagate when  >  0 Standing waves Traveling waves Wave equation d 2  /dt 2 = v 2 d 2  /dz 2 -  0 2  (where v has dimensions of velocity) Solution  = Re{A exp[i(  t-kz)]} Dispersion relation  2 =c 2 k 2 +  0 2 (  0 is the cut-off frequency) Acoustic pressure: v 2 ~ P/  Magnetic pressure: v 2 ~ B 2 /4 

6 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Multi-height Observations MOTH observations: time Fit correlation using: time series FT -1 Na K FT  Power  filter cross correlate Power

7 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Group Travel Time K→Na Group time (t g ) Green “islands” coincident with magnetic regions “ ➢ “ Quiet Sun”: ➢ Eveanescent-like behaviour for  <  0 ➢ upward propagating waves for  >  0 ➢ “Mangetic Regions” ➢ “islands” of evanescent-like behaviour ➢ Upward propagating waves for  <  0

8 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Phase Travel Time K→Na Phase time (t p ) Qualitatively the same structures as in the group travel time, but numerically much more stable, hence less noisy.

9 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Quiet Sun - Dispersion Relation t g : group travel time (model) t p : phase travel time (model) T g : group travel time (measured) T p : phase travel time (measured) Dispersion relation  2 =c 2 k 2 +  0 2 (  0 is the cut-off frequency),,

10 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Phase Travel Time MDI magnetogram

11 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere T p (B,ν) phase time 1.Acoustic “portals”: Lower acoustic cut-off in magnetized regions 2.Plasma-ß canopy: Wave reflection at the boundary layer between “thermal” and “magnetic” atmosphere 3.What are we looking at? Possible Explanation:

12 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere 1. Acoustic “Portals” ● Inclined magnetic field lines at the boundaries of supergranules locally lower the acoustic cut-off frequency ➔ Acoustic portals for low-frequency waves (<5 mHz) to propagate into the solar atmosphere ➔ Chromospheric heating Jefferies et al. 2006, ApJ 648, L151

13 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere 2. The Plasma-ß Canopy Rosenthal et al. (2002, ApJ 564, 508) time Below magnetic canopy: propagating wave Above magnetic canopy: evanescent tail

14 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Height of the ß Canopy reflecting surface MOTH Na Doppler Power MOTH K Doppler Power MDI Ni Doppler Power Potential Field Extrapolation

15 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere cross phase contours Height of the ß Canopy 0 100 200 300 400 500 600

16 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere Height of the ß Canopy 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 K→Na Ni→Na

17 Wolfgang finsterle, September 26, 2006 Seismology of the Solar atmosphere 3. What are we looking at? Some Thoughts about “Doppler”-Grams ● Line-of-sight velocities of the observed medium introduce Doppler shifts ● Dopplergrams filter for anti-parallel intensity changes in the red and blue wings of absorption lines ● The red- and blue-wing probes observe different heights in the solar atmosphere ● At high frequencies, the acoustic wavelengths become comparable to this separation ● → Frequency-dependent “Doppler”-grams


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