Transport of internetwork magnetic flux elements in the solar photosphere
Piyush Agrawal, Mark P. Rast, Milan Gosic, Luis R. Bellot Rubio,, Matthias Rempel

TL;DR
This study analyzes the motion of small-scale magnetic flux elements in the solar photosphere, revealing super-diffusive behavior and complex displacement distributions that impact models of solar magnetic flux transport.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the scaling and distribution of flux element motions over different timescales, combining observational data with simulations.
Findings
Super-diffusive scaling with a slope of about 1.48 observed.
Displacement distribution evolves from Rayleigh to Gaussian over time.
Short-term super-diffusive behavior explained by flux evolution in simulations.
Abstract
The motions of small-scale magnetic flux elements in the solar photosphere can provide some measure of the Lagrangian properties of the convective flow. Measurements of these motions have been critical in estimating the turbulent diffusion coefficient in flux-transport dynamo models and in determining the Alfven wave excitation spectrum for coronal heating models. We examine the motions of internetwork flux elements in a 24 hour long Hinode/NFI magnetogram sequence with 90 second cadence, and study both the scaling of their mean squared displacement and the shape of their displacement probability distribution as a function of time. We find that the mean squared displacement scales super-diffusively with a slope of about 1.48. Super-diffusive scaling has been observed in other studies for temporal increments as small as 5 seconds, increments over which ballistic scaling would be…
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