Bibcode
Rezaei, R.; Schlichenmaier, R.; Beck, C. A. R.; Bruls, J. H. M. J.; Schmidt, W.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 466, Issue 3, May II 2007, pp.1131-1144
Fecha de publicación:
5
2007
Revista
Número de citas
60
Número de citas referidas
53
Descripción
Aims: We investigate the relationship between the photospheric magnetic
field and the emission of the mid chromosphere of the Sun. Methods: We simultaneously observed the Stokes parameters of the
photospheric iron line pair at 630.2 nm and the intensity profile of the
chromospheric Ca II H line at 396.8 nm in a quiet Sun region at a
heliocentric angle of 53°. Various line parameters have been deduced
from the Ca II H line profile. The photospheric magnetic field vector
has been reconstructed from an inversion of the measured Stokes
profiles. After alignment of the Ca and Fe maps, a common mask has been
created to define network and inter-network regions. We perform a
statistical analysis of network and inter-network properties. The
H-index is the integrated emission in a 0.1 nm band around the Ca core.
We separate a non-magnetically, Hnon, and a magnetically,
Hmag, heated component from a non-heated component,
Hco in the H-index. Results: The average network and
inter-network H-indices are equal to 12 and 10 pm, respectively. The
emission in the network is correlated with the magnetic flux density,
approaching a value of H ≈ 10 pm for vanishing flux. The
inter-network magnetic field is dominated by weak field strengths with
values down to 200 G and has a mean absolute flux density of about 11 Mx
cm-2. Conclusions: We find that a dominant fraction
of the calcium emission caused by the heated atmosphere in the magnetic
network has non-magnetic origin (Hmag≈2 pm,
Hnon≈3 pm). Considering the effect of straylight, the
contribution from an atmosphere with no temperature rise to the H-index
(Hco≈6 pm) is about half of the observed H-index in the
inter-network. The H-index in the inter-network is not correlated to any
property of the photospheric magnetic field, suggesting that magnetic
flux concentrations have a negligible role in the chromospheric heating
in this region. The height range of the thermal coupling between the
photosphere and low/mid chromosphere increases in presence of magnetic
field. In addition, we demonstrate that a poor signal-to-noise level in
the Stokes profiles leads to a significant over-estimation of the
magnetic field strength.