8-12 May 2023
Haus H, Telegrafenberg
Europe/Berlin timezone

Chromospheric horizontal propagating waves revealed by fast cadence imaging in Ca II K with DKIST’s Visible Broadband Imager

9 May 2023, 09:30
15m
Haus H, Telegrafenberg

Haus H, Telegrafenberg

Potsdam, Germany
Oral presentation 2) Small and large-scale magnetic features – from bright points to sunspots (Observations and Theory) Small and large-scale magnetic features – from bright points to sunspots (Observations and Theory)

Speaker

Catherine Fischer (National Solar Observatory)

Description

The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope is currently acquiring first science data as part of its Operations Commissioning Phase. High-resolution, fast-cadence imaging in the chromospheric Ca II K filter of the Visible Broadband Imager reveals signatures of bright arches emanating radially from the locations of G-band bright points. The G-band bright points denote small-scale magnetic elements harboring strong magnetic fields (~kGauss). Comparison with 3-D simulations suggest that the traveling bright arches are acoustic waves or shock fronts, triggered by the movements of magnetic elements. Inspecting several examples of the events we indeed see the photospheric bright points changing their appearance and position, indicating either a horizontal movement, perhaps swaying, or rotation and seem to be the source location for the bright arches.

Submit to 'solar physics' topical issue? Maybe

Primary authors

Catherine Fischer (National Solar Observatory) Dr Friedrich Woeger (National Solar Observatory) Dr Thomas Rimmele (National Solar Observatory) Dr Peter Keys (Queen's University Belfast) Dr Oskar Steiner (IRSOL/KIS) Dr Vigeesh Gangadharan (Leibniz Institute for Solar Physics (KIS)) Dr Shahin Jafarzadeh (Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Göttingen, Germany) Dr José Roberto Canivete Cuissa (IRSOL)

Presentation Materials

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