The importance of horizontal Poynting flux in the solar photosphere
Suzana S. A. Silva, Mariarita Murabito, Shahin Jafarzadeh, Marco, Stangliani, Gary Verth, Istvan Ballai, Viktor Fedun

TL;DR
This study reveals that in the solar photosphere, the dominant electromagnetic energy flux is horizontal, concentrated along intergranular lanes, and can be effectively estimated using observable variables, challenging the traditional focus on vertical flux.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new proxy for horizontal Poynting flux based on observable variables and demonstrates its accuracy through simulations and observational data, highlighting the significance of horizontal energy transport.
Findings
Horizontal Poynting flux dominates in the photosphere.
Proxy based on observable variables accurately estimates flux.
Horizontal flux exceeds previous vertical flux estimates.
Abstract
The electromagnetic energy flux in the lower atmosphere of the Sun is a key tool to describe the energy balance of the solar atmosphere. Current investigations on energy flux in the solar atmosphere focus primarily on the vertical electromagnetic flux through the photosphere, ignoring the Poynting flux in other directions and its possible contributions to local heating. Based on a realistic Bifrost simulation of a quiet-Sun (coronal hole) atmosphere, we find that the total electromagnetic energy flux in the photosphere occurs mainly parallel to the photosphere, concentrating in small regions along intergranular lanes. Thereby, it was possible to define a proxy for this energy flux based on only variables that can be promptly retrieved from observations, namely, horizontal velocities of the small-scale magnetic elements and their longitudinal magnetic flux. Our proxy accurately describes…
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