Bibcode
Manso-Sainz, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2011, abstract #P14C-01
Fecha de publicación:
12
2011
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
The solar atmosphere is a highly ionized medium which is the playground
of magnetic fields. In the deepest layer (the photosphere), magnetic
fields disturb the 'normal' fluid motions forcing the plasma to behave
incounterintuitive ways; in the outer layers (the chromosphere and the
corona) magnetic fields rule, making the plasma levitate or even
ejecting it out of the gravitational well of the Sun, with important
consequences for us here on Earth. However, magnetic fields are elusive.
The only quantitative evidence of their presence is through the
polarization state of the light emitted by the plasma they are playing
with. Remote sensing of magnetic fields from 150 million km away through
spectropolarimetry is a challenge on applied physics as well as an art.
It requires the application of quantum mechanics, radiative transfer
theory, and advanced optics to the interpretation and analysis of
spectropolarimetric observations. I will review standard diagnostic
techniques and recent developments on this field. I will discuss their
limitations and how to overcome them through the complementary aspects
of different diagnostic techniques, spectral regions, and statistical
analysis. Finally, I will review what are the main areas for progress in
this regard: most notably, the 'measurement' of magnetic fields in the
extremely dilute and weakly magnetized outer layers of the sun.