The dark side of solar photospheric G-band bright points
T. L. Riethm\"uller, S. K. Solanki

TL;DR
This study uses 3D radiation MHD simulations to investigate the relationship between kiloGauss magnetic fields and G-band brightness in the solar photosphere, revealing that most strong fields in the quiet Sun are bright, but this correlation weakens in plage regions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the correlation between magnetic field strength and brightness in different solar regions using advanced simulations.
Findings
Only 7% of kiloGauss pixels in quiet Sun are darker than average.
In plage regions, up to 49% of kiloGauss pixels are associated with darkening.
KiloGauss elements in quiet Sun are generally brighter and more vertically oriented.
Abstract
Bright small-scale magnetic elements found mainly in intergranular lanes at the solar surface are named bright points (BPs). They show high contrasts in Fraunhofer G-band observations and are described by nearly vertical slender flux tubes or sheets. A recent comparison between BP observations in the ultraviolet (UV) and visible spectral range recorded with the balloon-borne observatory SUNRISE and state-of-the-art magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations revealed a kiloGauss magnetic field for 98% of the synthetic BPs. Here we address the opposite question, namely which fraction of pixels hosting kiloGauss fields coincides with an enhanced G-band brightness. We carried out 3D radiation MHD simulations for three magnetic activity levels (corresponding to the quiet Sun, weak and strong plage) and performed a full spectral line synthesis in the G-band. Only 7% of the kiloGauss pixels in…
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