Inclinations of small quiet-Sun magnetic features based on a new geometric approach
S. Jafarzadeh, S. K. Solanki, A. Lagg, L. R. Bellot Rubio, M. van, Noort, A. Feller, and S. Danilovic

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new geometric method to accurately determine the inclination of small magnetic features in the quiet Sun, revealing that previous inversion methods overestimate horizontal magnetic flux due to noise.
Contribution
The authors present a novel geometric approach for measuring magnetic field inclinations, providing more reliable results than traditional inversion techniques, especially for weak signals.
Findings
Geometric method finds nearly vertical magnetic fields (~14° inclination).
Inversions suggest almost horizontal fields (~75° inclination), likely overestimated.
The new method improves magnetic field analysis, especially for features with weak signals.
Abstract
High levels of horizontal magnetic flux have been reported in the quiet-Sun internetwork, often based on Stokes profile inversions. Here we introduce a new method for deducing the inclination of magnetic elements and use it to test magnetic field inclinations from inversions. We determine accurate positions of a set of small, bright magnetic elements in high spatial resolution images sampling different photospheric heights obtained by the Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory. Together with estimates of the formation heights of the employed spectral bands, these provide us with the inclinations of the magnetic features. We also compute the magnetic inclination angle of the same magnetic features from the inversion of simultaneously recorded Stokes parameters. Our new, geometric method returns nearly vertical fields (average inclination of around 14 deg with a relatively narrow…
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