Found 3 talks width keyword solar interior

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Thursday January 10, 2013
St Andrews University

Abstract

This talk will give an overview of our understanding of the Sun in the 1960's, the major discoveries since then, and the main questions that need to be answered in future. It will focus on the role of the magnetic field in the solar interior, the photosphere, prominences, coronal heating and eruptive flares.


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Friday January 30, 2009
National Astronomical Observatory, Japan

Abstract

The magnetic landscape of the polar region (Tsuneta et al, 2008) is characterized by vertical kilogauss patches with super-equipartition field strength, a coherence in polarity, lifetimes of 5-15 hr, and ubiquitous weaker transient horizontal fields (Lites et al 2008, Ishikawa & Tsuneta, 2008, 2009). Polar region in 2007 have abundant vertical fields much stronger than the quiet Sun. Unipolar appearance and disappearance of the kG vertical patches must be closely related to properties of the horizontal flow field in the polar region. Difference and similarity between the quiet sun and the polar region are summarized, and its implication for solar dynamo will be discussed. All the open field lines forming the polar coronal hole essentially originate from such magnetic patches, and the fast solar wind would emanate from these vertical flux tubes seen in the photosphere. We conjecture that vertical flux tubes with large expansion around the photospheric-coronal boundary serve as efficient chimneys for Alfven waves that accelerate the solar wind. Indeed, we discovered propagating Alfven waves (kink mode) with magneto-acoustic waves (sausage mode) in the solar photosphere with period of 4-13 minutes with Hinode spectro-polarimeter (Fujimura and Tsuneta, 2009). We found that these fluctuations are superposition of ascending and descending Alfven waves with almost equal intensities from the analysis of the phase relationship between transverse magnetic and velocity fluctuations. Aflven waves along flux tubes in the quiet sun appear to be efficiently reflected back probably at photosphere-corona boundary. It would be very interesting to measure possible change in the reflectivity of Alfven waves depending on the magnetic environment.


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Tuesday October 28, 2008
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, Spain

Abstract

We have discovered small whirlpools in the Sun, with a size similar to the terrestrial hurricanes (<0.5 Mm). The theory of solar convection predicts them, but they had remained elusive so far. The vortex flows are created at the downdrafts where the plasma returns to the solar interior after cooling down, and we detect them because some magnetic bright points (BPs) follow a logarithmic spiral in their way to be engulfed by a downdraft. Our disk center observations show 0.009 vortexes per Mm2, with a lifetime of the order of 5 min, and with no preferred sense of rotation. They are not evenly spread out over the surface, but they seem to trace the supergranulation and the mesogranulation. These observed properties are strongly biased by our type of measurement, unable to detect vortexes except when they are engulfing magnetic BPs.


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