Statistics of convective collapse events in the photosphere and chromosphere observed with the Hinode SOT
C.E. Fischer, A.G. de Wijn, R. Centeno, B.W. Lites, C.U. Keller

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of convective collapse events in the solar atmosphere using high-resolution Hinode SOT data, revealing their characteristics and effects on photospheric and chromospheric layers.
Contribution
It offers the first extensive statistical characterization of convective collapse events, including their duration, magnetic field intensification, and associated chromospheric brightenings.
Findings
Events last about 10 minutes.
Magnetic field strengths increase up to 1.65 kG.
Most events show strong downflows and chromospheric brightenings.
Abstract
Aims. Convective collapse, a theoretically predicted process that intensifies existing weak magnetic fields in the solar atmosphere, was first directly observed in a single event by Nagata et al. (2008) using the high resolution Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) of the Hinode satellite. Using the same space telescope, we performed a statistical analysis of convective collapse events. Methods. Our data sets consist of high resolution time series of polarimetric spectral scans of two iron lines formed in the lower photosphere and filter images in Mg I b2 and Ca II H, spectral lines that are formed in the high photosphere and the lower chromosphere, respectively. We were thus able to study the implication of convective collapse events on the high photospheric and the chromospheric layers. The physical parameters from the full Stokes profiles were obtained with the MERLIN Milne-Eddington…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
