Study of the polarization produced by the Zeeman effect in the solar Mg I b lines
C. Quintero Noda, H. Uitenbroek, M. Carlsson, D. Orozco Su\'arez, Y., Katsukawa, T. Shimizu, B. Ruiz Cobo, M. Kubo, T. Oba, Y. Kawabata, T., Hasegawa, K. Ichimoto, T. Anan, Y. Suematsu

TL;DR
This study evaluates the Zeeman effect's polarization signatures in Mg I b lines to determine their suitability for solar chromosphere magnetic diagnostics, highlighting Mg I b2 as particularly effective.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified atomic model for Mg I b lines, compares their effectiveness, and identifies Mg I b2 as optimal for multi-line solar magnetic observations.
Findings
Mg I b2 line is most capable for magnetic diagnostics.
Simplified atomic model is effective and computationally efficient.
Mg I b2 probes atmospheric heights between K I D1 and Ca II 8542 A lines.
Abstract
The next generation of solar observatories aim to understand the magnetism of the solar chromosphere. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the polarimetric signatures of chromospheric spectral lines. For this purpose, we here examine the suitability of the three Fraunhofer Mg I b1, b2, and b4 lines at 5183.6, 5172.7, and 5167.3 A, respectively. We start by describing a simplified atomic model of only 6 levels and 3 line transitions for computing the atomic populations of the 3p-4s (multiplet number 2) levels involved in the Mg I b line transitions assuming non-local thermodynamic conditions and considering only the Zeeman effect using the field-free approximation. We test this simplified atom against more complex ones finding that, although there are differences in the computed profiles, they are small compared with the advantages provided by the simple atom in terms of speed and…
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