Bibcode
DOI
López Ariste, A.; Casini, R.; Paletou, F.; Tomczyk, S.; Lites, B. W.; Semel, M.; Landi Degl'Innocenti, E.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 621, Issue 2, pp. L145-L148.
Advertised on:
3
2005
Journal
Citations
33
Refereed citations
21
Description
We report on spectropolarimetric observations of Hα in prominences
made with the Télescope Héliographique pour l'Etude du
Magnétisme et des Instabilités Solaires and the High
Altitude Observatory/Advanced Stokes Polarimeter. Stokes Q and U show
the expected profile shape from resonance scattering polarization and
the Hanle effect. In contrast, most of the time, Stokes V does not show
the antisymmetric profile shape typical of the Zeeman effect but a
profile that indicates the presence of strong atomic orientation in the
hydrogen levels, to an extent that cannot be explained by invoking the
alignment-to-orientation transfer mechanism induced by the prominence
magnetic field. We found that the largest signal amplitudes of Stokes V
(comparable to that of Stokes Q and U) could be produced by a process of
selective absorption of circularly polarized radiation from the
photosphere, which requires that the prominence be in the vicinity of an
active region. Although recent observations of active region filaments
indicate such a selective absorption mechanism as a plausible
explanation of the anomalous signals observed, the particular set of
conditions that must be met suggest that a different explanation may be
required to explain the almost ubiquitous symmetric V signal observed in
Hα prominences. Therefore, we speculate that an alternative
mechanism inducing strong atomic orientation at the observed level could
be due to the presence of electric fields inducing an electric Hanle
effect on Hα. Although we are still working toward a careful
modeling of this effect, including both electric and magnetic fields, we
present some preliminary considerations that seem to support this
possibility.