Bibcode
Steiner, O.; Franz, M.; González, N. B.; Nutto, C.; Rezaei, R.; Pillet, V. M.; Bonet, J. A.; Iniesta, J. C. d. T.; Domingo, V.; Solanki, S. K.; Knölker, M.; Schmidt, W.; Barthol, P.; Gandorfer, A.
Bibliographical reference
4th Hinode Science Meeting: Unsolved Problems and Recent Insights, ASP Conference series, Vol 455, proceedings of a conference held 11-15 October 2010 in Palermo, Italy. Edited by Luis R. Bellot Rubio, Fabio Reale, and Mats Carlsson. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2012, p.35
Advertised on:
5
2012
Citations
2
Refereed citations
1
Description
We investigated a time series of continuum intensity maps and
Dopplergrams of granulation in a very quiet solar region at the disk
center, recorded with the Imaging Magnetograph eXperiment (IMaX) on
board the balloon-borne solar observatory SUNRISE. We find that granules
frequently show substructure in the form of lanes composed of a leading
bright rim and a trailing dark edge, which move together from the
boundary of a granule into the granule itself. We find strikingly
similar events in synthesized intensity maps from an ab initio numerical
simulation of solar surface convection. We conclude that these granular
lanes are the visible signature of (horizontally oriented) vortex tubes.
The characteristic optical appearance of vortex tubes at the solar
surface is explained. This paper is a summary and update of the results
previously presented in Steiner et al. (2010).