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CSI 769/ASTR 769 Topics in Space Weather Fall 2005 Lecture 02 Sep. 6, 2005. Structure of the Sun and its Atmosphere. Reading: Gombosi, “Physics of Space Environment”, Chap.11, P211-235
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CSI 769/ASTR 769 Topics in Space Weather Fall 2005 Lecture 02 Sep. 6, 2005 Structure of the Sun and its Atmosphere • Reading: • Gombosi, “Physics of Space Environment”, Chap.11, P211-235 • Aschwanden, “Physics of the Solar Corona” • Chap. 1, P1-36 • Chap. 2, P37-66 • Chap. 3, P67-116
Stratified Structure of the Sun (4) Corona (3) Transition Region between Corona and Chromosphere (2) Chromosphere (1) Photosphere Atmosphere (3) Convection Zone (2) Radiative Zone (1) Core Inside the Sun
Inside the Sun • Core • depth: 0 – 0.25 Rs • Temperature: 20 Million Kelvin • Density: 150 g/cm3 • Energy generation • through nuclear fusion process • 41H 4He + 2e+ + 2ν + 26.73 Mev • (2) Radiative Zone • depth: 0.25 – 0.70 Rs • Temperature: 7 MK to 2 MK • Density: 20 g/cm3 to 0.2 g/cm3 • Energy transport region • through radiation transfer, or photon diffusion; conduction is negligible; no convection
Inside the Sun (cont.) • (3) Convection Zone • Depth: 0.70 – 1.00 Rs • Temperature: ~ 2 MK to 0.06 MK • Density: 0.2 g/cm3 – 10-7 g/cm3 • Opacity increase: • at 2 MK, opacity increases as • heavy ions (e.g., C, N, O, Ca, Fe) starts to hold electrons from fully ionized state. As a result, energy transfer through radiation is less efficient, and temperature gradient increases • Convection occurs: when the temperature gradient becomes sufficient large, and larger than that in the adiabatic condition • (dT/dr)rad ~ -KTLs (E11.18, Gombosi) • (dT/dr)ad ~ M(r)/r2 (E11.19, Gombosi)
Inside the Sun (cont.) Also see Figure 11.3 in Gombosi (P. 218)
Solar Atmosphere: hydrostatic model Fig. 1.19, Aschwanden (P. 24) Also see Fig. 11.11, Gombosi (P.228)
Photosphere • Surface of the Sun seen in visible wavelength (4000 – 7000 Å) • Thickness: a few hundred kilometers • Temperature: ~5700 K • Density: 1019 to 1016 particle/cm3
Chromosphere • A layer above the photosphere, transparent to broadband visible light, but can be seen in spectral lines, e.g., Hα line at 6563 Å • Thickness: 2000 km in hydrostatic model • ~5000 km in reality due to irregularity • Temperature: 6000 K plateau, up to 20000 K • Density: 1016 to 1010 particle/cm3
Transition Region • A very thin and irregular interface layer separating Chromosphere and the much hotter corona • Thickness: about 50 km only assuming homogeneous • Temperature: 20,000 K to 1000,000 K (or 1 MK) • Density: 1010 to 109 particle/cm3 • Can’t be seen in visible light or Hα line, but in UV light from ions, e.g, C IV (at 0.1 MK), O IV, Si IV
Corona • Extended outer atmosphere of the Sun • Thickness: Rs and extended into heliosphere • Temperature: 1 MK to 2 MK • Density: 109 to 107 particle/cm3 • Difficult to be seen in visible light, nor in UV from light ions, (C,O) • Seen in EUV from heavy ions, e.g., Fe X • Seen in X-rays
Solar Irradiance Spectrum • The effective temperature of the Sun is 5770 K • Black-body in visible light and longer wavelength • Line-blanketing in UV light • Excessive emission in EUV and X-ray from TR and corona • Also see Figure 11.10, Gombosi (P. 227)
Solar Spectrum versus Solar Structure • V (visible, 4000 Å – 7000 Å) and IR (Infrared, 7000 Å – 10000 Å • From Photosphere, the largest component of solar irradiance • UV (Ultraviolet, 1200 Å – 4000 Å) • Mainly from chromosphere • EUV (300 Å – 1200 Å) • Mainly from transition region • XUV (100 Å – 300 Å) and Soft X-ray (< 100 Å) • Mainly from Corona
Solar Irradiance Spectrum Figure 1.25, Aschwanden (P.34)
Spectrum lines: absorption and emission (4000 Å – 7000 Å) • Absorption lines in photosphere and chromosphere • Emission lines in Transition region and corona (300 Å – 600 Å)
Features in Photosphere • Sunspot: umbra/penumbra • Faculae • Granule • Supergranule • Magnetogram
Photosphere: Sunspot Observed in continuum visible light as Galileo did
Photosphere: Sunspot (cont.) • Sunspots show two main structures: • Umbra: a central dark region, • Penumbra: surrounding region of a less darker zone SOHO/MDI 2004/10/24
Photosphere: Sunspot (cont.) • Been noticed in ancient time • Since 1700, systematic record of sunspot number • Sunspot was found to be a magnetic feature in 1930 • Big Sunspot is about half the normal brightness. • B = σT4 ,Or T ~ B ¼ (Stefan-Boltzman Law) • Tspot/Tsun=(Bspot/Bsun)1/4=(0.5)1/4 = 0.84 • Tsun = 5700 K • Tspot = 5700 * 0.84 = 4788 K • Sunspot is about 1000 K cooler than surrounding
Photosphere: Sunspot • Sunspot is in pressure balance because of internal magnetic pressure • Pe = Pi + Pmag • Pe: external thermal pressure • Pe = N K Te • N: particle density • K: Boltzmann;s constant • Te: external temperature • Pi: internal thermal pressure • Pi= N K Te • Pmag: magnetic pressure inside sunspot • Pmag = B2/8π • B: magnetic field strength in the sunspot
Photosphere: Faculae • Faculae • bright lanes near the sunspot • make the visible Sun brighter, e.g., whole disk slightly brighter at the sunspot maximum than that at the minimum • Associated with small concentration of magnetic bundles between granules
Photosphere: Granules • Granules • Small (about 1000 km across) cellular features • Cover the entire Sun except for areas of sunspots • They are the tops of convection cells where hot fluid (bubble) rises up from the interior • They cools and then sinks inward along the dark lane • Individual granules last for only about 20 minutes • Flow speed can reach 7 km/s
Photosphere: Granules (cntl.) • Granules • Exp. a movie of granules
Photosphere: Supergranules (ctnl.) • Supergranules • much larger version of granules (about 35,000 km across) • Cover the entire Sun • They lasts for a day to two • They have flow speed of about 0.5 km/s • Best seen in the • measurement of • the “Doppler shift”
Chromosphere Plage Filament/prominence Chromospheric network
Chromosphere: Plage • Plage (beach in French) • Bright patches surrounding sunspots that are best seen in Hα • Associated with concentration of magnetic fields
Chromosphere: Filament/Prominence (cont.) • Filament/Prominence • Dense clouds of chromospheric material suspended in the corona by loops of magnetic field • Filaments and prominences are the same thing • Prominences, as bright emission feature, are seen projecting out above the limb of the Sun, • Filamentsas dark absorption feature, are seen projecting on the disk of the Sun,
Chromosphere: Filament/Prominence (cont.) • Filament/Prominence • They can be as small as several thousand km • They can be as large as one Rs long, or 700,000 km • They can remain in a quiet or quiescent state for days or weeks • They can also erupt and rise off of the Sun over the course of a few minutes or hours
Chromosphere: Filament/Prominence (cont.) • Filament/Prominence • Exp. Movie of eruption, so called granddady prominence
Chromosphere: Network • Chromospheric Network • web-like pattern mostly seen in red line of Hα (at 6563 Å) and UV line of Ca II K (at 3934 Å) • The network outlines the supergranule cells and is due to the presence of bundles of magnetic field lines that are concentrated there by the fluid motions in the supergranules
Chromosphere: complex structure (cont.) • Magnetized, Highly inhomogeneous, highly dynamic Figure 1.17 Aschwanden (P.22)
Transition Region Image: S VI (933 Å) at 200,000 K (SOHO/SUMER) May 12/13 1996 composite Image 9256 raster image, Each with 3 s exposure Collected in eight alternating horizontal scan across the Sun
Transition Region (cont.) Image: C IV (1548 Å) at 100,000 K (SOHO/SUMER) Outline the top of chromosphere
Corona • Large scale coronal structures • Coronal loops • Physical properties in corona
Coronal: Large Scale Structure 1. Coronal holes 2. Active regions 3. Quiet sun regions X-ray Corona > 2 MK Continuum 05/08/92 YOHKOH SXT
Corona: Coronal Holes • Coronal holes • Regions where the corona is dark • A coronal hole is dark because plasma density is low there
Corona: Coronal Holes(cont.) • Coronal holes • Coronal holes are associated with “open” magnetic field lines • Particles easily flow away along the “open” field lines • “open” field lines are caused by a large surface region with unipolar magnetic field, which are often found in the polar regions. Also see Figure 1.14, Aschwanden (P. 18)
Corona: Active Region • Coronal active region: • Consists of bright loops with enhanced plasma density and temperature • They are associated with photospheric sunspot
Corona: Active Region (cont.) • Active region loops trace magnetic field lines that are selectively heated • Active Region • Sunspots • 3-D coronal magnetic model • side-view of the model
Corona: Active Region (cont.) Coronal loop Evolution: from TRACE 171 Å, Fe IX/Fe X, 1.0 MK
Corona: Quiet Sun Region • Quiet Sun regions • Generally, regions outside coronal holes and active regions • Properties, such as density and temperature, in-between the coronal holes and active regions • Many transient bright points associated with small magnetic dipoles. From SOHO/EIT 195 Å band Fe XII, 1.5 MK Nov. 10, 1997
Coronal Properties • Plasma state: Elements H/He are fully ionized, and heavy elements are highly ionized (Fe X, Fe XIV). • Magnetized plasma
Coronal Property: Low β For a magnetized plasma, plasma β is defined as βΞ gas pressure / magnetic pressure In CGS unit, Pth=nKT, and PB=B2/8π β = 8πnKT/ B2 If β >> 1, gas pressure dominates, flows control B If β << 1, magnetic pressure dominates, B control plasma flow Therefore, the coronal structure is determined by magnetic field distribution.
Plasmaβ in solar atmopshere Figure 1.22, Aschwanden (P.29)
Corona Property: Loop • Thermal conduction is very efficient along the magnetic field line • Isothermal plasma along a loop • Thermal conduction is inhibited across magnetic field lines • Charged particles are tied to magnetic field lines in gyro-motion, preventing particle diffusion across magnetic field lines. • Multi-temperature loops are mixed • Differential emission measure DEM: dEM/dT
Coronal Property: loop (cont.) • Hydrostatic Model of Corona (Chap. 3, Aschwanden) • dP/ds – ρg =0 Momentum Equation • EH – ER – EC = 0 Energy equation • EH: Heating rate • ER: Radiative loss rate • EC: conductive loss rate
Bremsstrahlung Emission • Bremsstrahlung emission (in German meaning "braking radiation") • the radiation is produced as the electrons are deflected in the Coulomb field of the ions. Bremsstrahlung emission
Limb darkening effect in Photosphere • Central region looks brighter than that close the limbs