Bibcode
Quintero Noda, C.; Iijima, H.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Carlsson, M.; de la Cruz Rodríguez, J.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Oba, T.; Anan, T.; Kubo, M.; Kawabata, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 486, Issue 3, p.4203-4215
Fecha de publicación:
7
2019
Número de citas
7
Número de citas referidas
7
Descripción
We investigate the diagnostic potential of the spectral lines at 850 nm
for understanding the magnetism of the lower atmosphere. For that
purpose, we use a newly developed 3D simulation of a chromospheric jet
to check the sensitivity of the spectral lines to this phenomenon as
well as our ability to infer the atmospheric information through
spectropolarimetric inversions of noisy synthetic data. We start
comparing the benefits of inverting the entire spectrum at 850 nm versus
only the Ca II 8542 Å spectral line. We found a better match of
the input atmosphere for the former case, mainly at lower heights.
However, the results at higher layers were not accurate. After several
tests, we determined that we need to weight more the chromospheric lines
than the photospheric ones in the computation of the goodness of the
fit. The new inversion configuration allows us to obtain better fits and
consequently more accurate physical parameters. Therefore, to extract
the most from multiline inversions, a proper set of weights needs to be
estimated. Besides that, we conclude again that the lines at 850 nm, or
a similar arrangement with Ca II 8542 Å plus Zeeman-sensitive
photospheric lines, pose the best-observing configuration for examining
the thermal and magnetic properties of the lower solar atmosphere.
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Los campos magnéticos son uno de los ingredientes fundamentales en la formación de estrellas y su evolución. En el nacimiento de una estrella, los campos magnéticos llegan a frenar su rotación durante el colapso de la nube molecular, y en el fin de la vida de una estrella, el magnetismo puede ser clave en la forma en la que se pierden las capas
Tobías
Felipe García