Power spectrum of turbulent convection in the solar photosphere
L. Yelles Chaouche, R. H. Cameron, S. K. Solanki, T. L. Riethm\"uller,, L. S. Anusha, V. Witzke, A.I. Shapiro, P. Barthol, A. Gandorfer, L. Gizon, J., Hirzberger, M. van Noort, J. Blanco Rodr\'iguez, J. C. Del Toro Iniesta, D., Orozco Su\'arez, W. Schmidt, V. Mart\'inez Pillet

TL;DR
This study analyzes the power spectra of turbulent convection in the solar photosphere using high-resolution observations and simulations, revealing scale-dependent turbulence properties and the impact of spatial resolution on spectral indices.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the power-law behavior of photospheric turbulence and how observational limitations affect the interpretation of turbulence spectra.
Findings
Power-law index of ~-2 in quiet Sun observations and smeared simulations.
Unsmeared simulations show a steeper index of ~-2.25.
Vertical velocity power spectra vary with height, indicating scale-dependent momentum transport.
Abstract
The solar photosphere provides us with a laboratory for understanding turbulence in a layer where the fundamental processes of transport vary rapidly and a strongly superadiabatic region lies very closely to a subadiabatic layer. Our tools for probing the turbulence are high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations such as have recently been obtained with the two sunrise missions, and numerical simulations. Our aim is to study photospheric turbulence with the help of Fourier power spectra that we compute from observations and simulations. We also attempt to explain some properties of the photospheric overshooting flow with the help of its governing equations and simulations. We find that quiet-Sun observations and smeared simulations exhibit a power-law behavior in the subgranular range of their Doppler velocity power spectra with an index of. The unsmeared simulations…
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