Energy and Helicity in Emerging Active Regions Yang Liu, Peter Schuck, and HMI vector field data team.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Back Reaction on the Photospheric Magnetic field in Solar Eruptions Dandan Ye.
Advertisements

Estimating the magnetic energy in solar magnetic configurations Stéphane Régnier Reconnection seminar on Thursday 15 December 2005.
Study of Magnetic Helicity Injection in the Active Region NOAA Associated with the X-class Flare of 2011 February 15 Sung-Hong Park 1, K. Cho 1,
Magnetic Helicity and Energetics in Solar Active Regions: Can we calculate them – why do we need them? Manolis K. Georgoulis JHU/APL Whistler, CA, 08/01/07.
Construction of 3D Active Region Fields and Plasma Properties using Measurements (Magnetic Fields & Others) S. T. Wu, A. H. Wang & Yang Liu 1 Center for.
Inductive Flow Estimation for HMI Brian Welsch, Dave Bercik, and George Fisher, SSL UC-Berkeley.
Can We Determine Electric Fields and Poynting Fluxes from Vector Magnetograms and Doppler Shifts? by George Fisher, Brian Welsch, and Bill Abbett Space.
Simulation of Flux Emergence from the Convection Zone Fang Fang 1, Ward Manchester IV 1, William Abbett 2 and Bart van der Holst 1 1 Department of Atmospheric,
SSPVE Discussion Group B Question 5 To what extent is it possible to predict the emergence of active regions before they reach the photosphere, or to predict.
Chip Manchester 1, Fang Fang 1, Bart van der Holst 1, Bill Abbett 2 (1)University of Michigan (2)University of California Berkeley Study of Flux Emergence:
Using Photospheric Flows Estimated from Vector Magnetogram Sequences to Drive MHD Simulations B.T. Welsch, G.H. Fisher, W.P. Abbett, D.J. Bercik, Space.
Estimating Electric Fields from Sequences of Vector Magnetograms George H. Fisher, Brian T. Welsch, William P. Abbett, and David J. Bercik University of.
Flows in Active Regions Inferred from the Time-distance and the DAVE4VM.
HMI – Synoptic Data Sets HMI Team Meeting Jan. 26, 2005 Stanford, CA.
1 SDO/HMI Products From Vector Magnetograms Yang Liu – Stanford University
Free Energies via Velocity Estimates B.T. Welsch & G.H. Fisher, Space Sciences Lab, UC Berkeley.
Inductive Local Correlation Tracking or, Getting from One Magnetogram to the Next Goal (MURI grant): Realistically simulate coronal magnetic field in eruptive.
Magnetogram Evolution Near Polarity Inversion Lines Brian Welsch and Yan Li Space Sciences Lab, UC-Berkeley, 7 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA , USA.
Ward Manchester University of Michigan Coupling of the Coronal and Subphotospheric Magnetic Field in Active Regions by Shear Flows Driven by The Lorentz.
Flows in Active Regions Inferred from the Time-distance and the DAVE4VM.
Observations of December 2006 events Yang Liu – Stanford University
Flows in NOAA AR 8210: An overview of MURI progress to thru Feb.’04 Modelers prescribe fields and flows (B, v) to drive eruptions in MHD simulations MURI.
M1-H2: Magnetic Activity Science Goals and Approaches DRAFT! Chair(s): Abbett/Hoeksema/Komm.
Flows and the Photospheric Magnetic Field Dynamics at Interior – Corona Interface Brian Welsch, George Fisher, Yan Li, & the UCB/SSL MURI & CISM Teams.
Helicity as a Component of Filament Formation D.H. Mackay University of St. Andrews Solar Theory Group.
Free Magnetic Energy in Solar Active Regions above the Minimum-Energy Relaxed State (Regnier, S., Priest, E.R ApJ) Use magnetic field extrapolations.
Study of magnetic helicity in solar active regions: For a better understanding of solar flares Sung-Hong Park Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research New.
Kinetic and Magnetic Helicities of Solar Active Regions Ram Ajor Maurya, Ashok Ambastha And Vema Reddy Udaipur Solar Observatory Physical Research Laboratory,
Space Weather Forecast With HMI Magnetograms: Proposed data products Yang Liu, J. T. Hoeksema, and HMI Team.
Using Photospheric Flows Estimated from Vector Magnetogram Sequences to Drive MHD Simulations B.T. Welsch, G.H. Fisher, W.P. Abbett, D.J. Bercik, Space.
Active Region Flux Transport Observational Techniques, Results, & Implications B. T. Welsch G. H. Fisher
A particularly obvious example of daily changing background noise level Constructing the BEST High-Resolution Synoptic Maps from MDI J.T. Hoeksema, Y.
B. T. Welsch Space Sciences Lab, Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA J. M. McTiernan Space Sciences.
Photospheric Sources of Very Fast (>1100km/s) Coronal Mass Ejections Recent studies show that only very fast CMEs (> 1100 km/s) are capable of producing.
Summary of UCB MURI workshop on vector magnetograms Have picked 2 observed events for targeted study and modeling: AR8210 (May 1, 1998), and AR8038 (May.
1 Hinode Monthly Highlights – Slow Solar Wind Sources Derived from recent publication from the Hinode/EIS team through the Naval Research Laboratory EIS.
LINE OF SIGHT MAGNETIC FIELD EVOLUTION & DATA ANALYSIS Dandan Ye.
Kinematics and coronal field strength of an untwisting jet in a polar coronal hole observed by SDO/AIA H. Chen, J. Zhang, & S. Ma ILWS , Beijing.
Coronal Heating of an Active Region Observed by XRT on May 5, 2010 A Look at Quasi-static vs Alfven Wave Heating of Coronal Loops Amanda Persichetti Aad.
Comparison on Calculated Helicity Parameters at Different Observing Sites Haiqing Xu (NAOC) Collaborators: Hongqi, Zhang, NAOC Kirill Kuzanyan, IZMIRAN,
Coronal Mass Ejection As a Result of Magnetic Helicity Accumulation
1Yang Liu/Magnetic FieldHMI Science – 1 May 2003 Magnetic Field Goals – magnetic field & eruptive events Yang Liu Stanford University.
D. A. Falconer (UAH/MSFC/NSSTC), R. L. Moore, G. A. Gary, (NASA/MSFC/NSSTC) Development of Empirical Tools for Forecasting Safe or Dangerous Space Weather.
SUB-GROUP 1: Surface Solar Magnetic Fields  The central question: Can we infer the orientation of Bz of an ICME at 1 AU by focusing on the study of the.
Using Realistic MHD Simulations for Modeling and Interpretation of Quiet Sun Observations with HMI/SDO I. Kitiashvili 1,2, S. Couvidat 2 1 NASA Ames Research.
Is there any relationship between photospheric flows & flares? Coupling between magnetic fields in the solar photosphere and corona implies that flows.
Karen Meyer University of St Andrews Scotland 1 st year PhD student (3 months in)
SHINE 2006 David Alexander Rice University Exploring the dynamics of flux-emergence in magnetically-complex solar active regions David Alexander and Lirong.
1 Mei Zhang ( National Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences ) Solar cycle variation of kinetic helicity Collaborators: Junwei Zhao (Stanford,
Evolutionary Characteristics of Magnetic Helicity Injection in Active Regions Hyewon Jeong and Jongchul Chae Seoul National University, Korea 2. Data and.
Horizontal Flows in Active Regions from Multi-Spectral Observations of SDO Sushant Tripathy 1 Collaborators K. Jain 1, B. Ravindra 2, & F. Hill 1 1 National.
1 Yongliang Song & Mei Zhang (National Astronomical Observatory of China) The effect of non-radial magnetic field on measuring helicity transfer rate.
Thought in 2000: Magnetic helicity is an important theoretical concept Pascal Démoulin but there is no way to estimate it from observations.
Magnetic Helicity and Solar Eruptions Alexander Nindos Section of Astrogeophysics Physics Department University of Ioannina Ioannina GR Greece.
The Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) has continuously measured the vector magnetic field, intensity, and.
What we can learn from active region flux emergence David Alexander Rice University Collaborators: Lirong Tian (Rice) Yuhong Fan (HAO)
Horizontal Flows in the Photosphere and the Subphotosphere in Two Active Regions Yang Liu, Junwei Zhao, Peter W. Schuck.
2. Method outline2. Method outline Equation of relative helicity (Berger 1985): - : the fourier transform of normal component of magnetic field on the.
Helicity Thinkshop 2009, Beijing Asymmetry of helicity injection in emerging active regions L. Tian, D. Alexander Rice University, USA Y. Liu Yunnan Astronomical.
Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions
Magnetic Helicity in Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study
Hyewon Jeong, Jongchul Chae Seoul National University
MDI Level 1.8 Magnetograms
Abstract We simulate the twisting of an initially potential coronal flux tube by photospheric vortex motions. The flux tube starts to evolve slowly(quasi-statically)
Observations of December 2006 events
Vector polarimetry with HMI
Preflare State Rust et al. (1994) 太陽雑誌会.
Magnetic Helicity in Solar Active Regions: Some Observational Results
Sakai, J. I., Nishi, K., and Sokolov, I. V. ApJ, 2002, 576, 1018
Magnetic Helicity In Emerging Active Regions: A Statistical Study
Presentation transcript:

Energy and Helicity in Emerging Active Regions Yang Liu, Peter Schuck, and HMI vector field data team

Outline Energy and helicity in three emerging active regions; Test with Demoulin & Berger’s model (2003; DB03).

Calculation of energy and helicity fluxes emerging termshear term emerging term shear term B h, B n (obs), and V h, V n (obs + DAVE4VM)

Case 1: AR11072—a simple AR

B_n (image) + V_h (arrows)

B_n (image) + V_n (contours)

B_n (image) + B_h (arrows)

Summary (For AR11072, a simple bipolar AR): 1.Helicity flux from shear term is dominant. It follows magnetic flux emergence, but with a lag in phase; 2.Helicity flux from emergence term is small during flux emergence, implying that the emerging field is initially close to potential field; 3.Helicity fluxes from both terms have the same sign.

Summary: 1.Energy flux from shear term varies following flux emergence, and approaches to zero after emergence stops; 2.Energy flux from emergence term has a delay in phase with the flux emergence, but keeps certain level after the emergence stops.

Summary (AR11072-simple AR) Helicity Flux across the photosphere –Helicity flux from shear term is dominant, varying with magnetic flux emergence, but with a small lag in phase, approaching to zero after emergence stops; –Helicity flux from emergence term is rather small, implying the initial emerging field is close to potential; –The signs of the helicity fluxes from both terms are the same. Energy Flux across the photosphere –Energy flux from shear term varies with flux emergence, and approaches to zero after emergence stops; –Energy flux from emergence term has a delay in phase with the flux emergence, and keeps substantial level after emergence stops. Major contribution is from the strong upflows surrounding sunspots.

Case 2: AR11117—multipole AR

B_z (image) + V_h (arrows)

B_z (image) + V_n (contours)

B_z (image) + B_h(arrows)

Summary (For AR11117, a multipole AR): 1.Helicity flux from shear term is dominant. It follows magnetic flux emergence; 2.Helicity flux from emergence term is small during flux emergence, implying that the emerging field is initially close to potential field; 3.Helicity fluxes from both terms have the same sign in most of time.

Summary: 1.Energy flux from shear term varies following flux emergence; 2.Energy flux from emergence term has an outstanding delay in phase with the flux emergence.

Summary (AR11117-multipole AR) Helicity flux –Helicity flux from shear term is dominant, and variation of the helicity flux follows flux emergence; –Helicity flux from emergence term is small, implying emerging field is originally close to potential field; –Both fluxes are the same sign during flux emergence. Energy flux –Energy flux from shear term follows flux emergence; –Energy flux from emergence term shows a delay in phase with flux emergence. Major contribution is from the upflows surrounding sunspots.

Case 3: AR11158-a very complex AR

Summary (For AR11158, a very complex AR): 1.Helicity flux from shear term is dominant. It follows magnetic flux emergence with a lag in phase. It becomes even higher after emergence stops. It implies that strong surface flows still work then. 2.Helicity flux from emergence term is small during flux emergence, implying that the emerging field is initially close to potential field; 3.Helicity fluxes from both terms have the same sign in most time.

Summary: 1.Energy flux from shear term varies following flux emergence; 2.Energy flux from emergence term has a delay in phase with the flux emergence. It keeps fairly high flux level after emergence stops.

Summary (AR11158-complex AR) Helicity flux –Helicity flux from shear term is dominant, and variation of the helicity flux follows flux emergence with a phase lag. It becomes even higher after emergence stops. –Helicity flux from emergence term is small during flux emergence, implying emerging field is initially close to potential field. –Both fluxes are the same sign during flux emergence. Energy flux –Energy flux from shear term follows flux emergence; –Energy flux from emergence term shows a delay in phase with flux emergence. It keeps fairly high level after emergence stops. Major contribution is from the upflows surrounding sunspots.

Test with Demoulin & Berger’s model (2003)—DB03 model Using DAVE (Schuck 2006)  u

Summary (DB03 model) Horizontal velocity derived by tracking the photospheric footpoints of magnetic flux tubes is close to horizontal plasma velocity, but may not be the combination of horizontal and vertical velocities, as predicted in DB03 model; However, as helicity flux from shear term is dominant, the helicity computed from DB03 model is close to the total helicity; The energy from DB03 model cannot be deemed as the total energy—significant difference is seen.

Conclusions Helicity flux across the photosphere: –Helicity flux from shear term is dominant. Its variation is consistent with flux emergence (may has a phase lag). – Helicity flux from emerging term is small. It implies that the emerging field is initially close to potential. –Both fluxes have the same sign during emergence. Energy flux across the photosphere –Energy flux from shear term is consistent with the flux emergence in phase. It approaches to zero after emergence stops. –Energy flux from emerging term shows an outstanding delay in phase with the flux emergence, and it keeps fairly high level after emergence stops. Upflows surrounding sunspots contributes substantially energy flux. DB03 model –The horizontal velocity derived by tracking the photospheric footpoints of magnetic tubes is close to the horizontal plasma velocity; –The helicity estimated by DB03 model is close to total helicity, while the energy from DB03 model is significantly away from the total energy.