4.7 Article

On the relation of G-band bright points to the photospheric magnetic field

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 553, Issue 1, Pages 449-469

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/320663

Keywords

Sun : faculae, lages; Sun : magnetic fields; Sun : photosphere

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cotemporal observations in the 4305 Angstrom G-band and Ca II lambda 3933 K-line, Fe I 6302 Angstrom magnetograms, and 6563 Angstrom Ha images are used to study the relation of G-band bright points (GBPs) to magnetic elements in the photosphere. Angular resolution of 0'.2 and 0'.3 is achieved in the best G-band and magnetogram images, respectively. Single magnetogram sensitivity of 120-150 gauss (Phi (min) similar to 10(16) Mx) is achieved. Small-scale GBPs appear both in intergranular lanes and on the edges of certain bright, rapidly expanding granules. The latter class of GBPs are nonmagnetic (at the flux limit) and are a source of confusion in magnetic element studies. The large-scale pattern of GBPs and magnetic flux in plage are highly correlated; GBPs occur preferentially on the periphery of extended plage regions, which are primarily demarcated by dark or neutral-contrast regions (e.g., pores or unresolved structures). On subarcsecond scales, GBPs are cospatial (to within an average of 0.24) and comorphous with magnetic elements in intergranular lanes; larger flux concentrations appear more diffuse than the associated GBP groupings. The average peak flux density of GBPs in the data set is similar to 160 gauss. No significant trend in GBP flux density as a function of either contrast or size is found. Rings of magnetic elements on 5 scales remain very stable for periods on the order of hours. GBPs trace the temporal evolution of magnetic elements closely: there is no indication of a lead or lag (to within the 30-90 s precision of our data) in the appearance of GBPs relative to the appearance of magnetic elements. Pore formation via the accumulation of magnetic elements at a flow-held sink is seen in the data set. Magnetic elements and granules are continually advected into pores by the photospheric flow field.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available