A&A 441, 1183-1190 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053373
DOT tomography of the solar atmosphere
IV. Magnetic patches in internetwork areas
A. G. de Wijn1, R. J. Rutten1, 2, E. M. W. P. Haverkamp1 and P. Sütterlin11 Sterrekundig Instituut, Utrecht University, Postbus 80 000, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands
e-mail: [A.G.deWijn;R.J.Rutten]@astro.uu.nl
2 Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, Oslo University, PO Box 1029 Blindern, 0315 Oslo, Norway
(Received 5 May 2005 / Accepted 23 June 2005 )
Abstract
We use G-band and Ca II H image sequences from the Dutch Open
Telescope (DOT) to study magnetic elements that appear as bright points
in internetwork parts of the quiet solar photosphere and chromosphere.
We find that many of these bright points appear recurrently with varying
intensity and horizontal motion within longer-lived magnetic patches.
We develop an algorithm for detection of the patches and find that all
patches identified last much longer than the granulation. The patches
outline cell patterns on mesogranular scales, indicating that magnetic
flux tubes are advected by granular flows to mesogranular boundaries.
Statistical analysis of the emergence and disappearance of the patches
points to an average patch lifetime as long as
(about nine hours), which suggests that the magnetic elements
constituting strong internetwork fields are not generated by a local
turbulent dynamo.
Key words: Sun: magnetic fields -- Sun: granulation -- Sun: photosphere -- Sun: chromosphere
© ESO 2005

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Mendeley
Twitter