Bibcode
Felipe, T.; Kuckein, C.; Thaler, I.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 617, id.A39, 10 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
9
2018
Revista
Número de citas
28
Número de citas referidas
27
Descripción
Context. In the solar atmosphere, the acoustic cutoff frequency is a
local quantity that depends on atmospheric height. It separates
low-frequency evanescent waves from high-frequency propagating waves.
Aims: We measure the cutoff frequency of slow magnetoacoustic
waves at various heights of a sunspot umbra and compare the results with
the estimations from several analytical formulae. Methods: We
analyzed the oscillations in the umbra of a sunspot belonging to active
region NOAA 12662 observed in the 10 830 Å spectral region with
the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph and in the Fe I 5435 Å line with
the GREGOR Fabry-Pérot Interferometer. Both instruments are
attached to the GREGOR telescope at the Observatorio del Teide,
Tenerife, Spain. We computed the phase and amplification spectra between
the velocity measured from various pairs of lines that sample various
heights of the solar atmosphere. The cutoff frequency and its height
variation were estimated from the inspection of the spectra.
Results: At the deep umbral photosphere the cutoff frequency is around 5
mHz and it increases to 6 mHz at higher photospheric layers. At the
chromosphere the cutoff is 3.1 mHz. A comparison of the observationally
determined cutoff with the theoretically predicted values reveals an
agreement in the general trend and a reasonable match at the
chromosphere, but also significant quantitative differences at the
photosphere. Conclusions: Our analyses show strong evidence of
the variation of the cutoff frequency with height in a sunspot umbra,
which is not fully accounted for by current analytical estimations. This
result has implications for our understanding of wave propagation, the
seismology of active regions, and the evaluation of heating mechanisms
based on compressible waves.
Proyectos relacionados
Magnestismo Solar y Estelar
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