Probing deep photospheric layers of the quiet Sun with high magnetic sensitivity
A. Lagg, S. K. Solanki, H.-P. Doerr, M. J.Mart\'inez Gonz\'alez, T., Riethm\"uller, M. Collados Vera, R. Schlichenmaier, D. Orozco Su\'arez, M., Franz, A. Feller, C. Kuckein, W. Schmidt, A. Asensio Ramos, A. Pastor Yabar,, O. von der L\"uhe, C. Denker, H. Balthasar, R. Volkmer

TL;DR
This study uses high-sensitivity spectropolarimetric measurements from the GREGOR telescope to analyze the magnetic field structure of the quiet Sun's deep photospheric layers, accounting for noise and straylight effects.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution, high-sensitivity magnetic field measurements of the quiet Sun, revealing ubiquitous weak magnetic fields and validating surface dynamo simulations.
Findings
80% of spectra show signals above 3σ level
Surface dynamo simulations match observed asymmetries
Magnetic fields range from 10 to 100 Gauss, with some kilo-Gauss concentrations
Abstract
Context. Investigations of the magnetism of the quiet Sun are hindered by extremely weak polarization signals in Fraunhofer spectral lines. Photon noise, straylight, and the systematically different sensitivity of the Zeeman effect to longitudinal and transversal magnetic fields result in controversial results in terms of the strength and angular distribution of the magnetic field vector. Aims. The information content of Stokes measurements close to the diffraction limit of the 1.5 m GREGOR telescope is analyzed. We took the effects of spatial straylight and photon noise into account. Methods. Highly sensitive full Stokes measurements of a quiet-Sun region at disk center in the deep photospheric Fe I lines in the 1.56 {\mu}m region were obtained with the infrared spectropolarimeter GRIS at the GREGOR telescope. Noise statistics and Stokes V asymmetries were analyzed and compared to…
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