A Statistical Analysis of the SOT-Hinode Observations of Solar Spicules and their Wave-like Behavior
E. Tavabi, S. Koutchmy, A. Ajabshirizadeh

TL;DR
This study analyzes solar spicules observed by SOT-Hinode, revealing their diameter variations, wave-like transverse oscillations, and evidence of helical motion, contributing new insights into their magnetic and dynamic properties.
Contribution
It introduces the first Fourier amplitude spectra of spicule diameters at different heights and provides evidence of helical motion and wave phenomena in high-resolution observations.
Findings
Identification of a range of spicule diameters including unresolved types
Detection of transverse oscillations consistent with kink or Alfvén waves
Observation of helical motion with ~120 sec periods
Abstract
We consider a first important parameter of spicules as observed above the solar visible limb: their apparent diameter as a function of the height above the limb which determines their aspect ratio and leads to the discussion of their magnetic origin using the flux tube approximation. We found that indeed spicules show a whole range of diameters, including unresolved "interacting spicules" (I-S), depending of the definition chosen to characterize this ubiquitous dynamical phenomenon occurring into a low coronal surrounding. 1-D Fourier amplitude spectra (AS) made at different heights above the limb are shown for the first time. A definite signature in the 0.18 to 0.25 Mm range exists, corresponding to the occurrence of the newly discovered type II spicules and, even more impressively, large Fourier amplitudes are observed in the 0.3 to the 1.2 Mm range of diameters and spacing, in rough…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
