Photospheric Swirls in a Quiet-Sun Region
Quan Xie, Jiajia Liu, Chris J. Nelson, Robert Erd\'elyi, Yuming Wang

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution solar observations and an automated detection algorithm to analyze photospheric swirls, revealing their preferred locations, statistical properties, and correlation with magnetic concentrations, suggesting a common triggering mechanism.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed spatial distribution analysis of photospheric swirls in a quiet Sun region using automated detection, highlighting their association with magnetic structures.
Findings
Most swirls are located in lanes between mesogranules.
Swirl properties follow Gaussian distributions.
Swirl number correlates with magnetic concentration strength.
Abstract
Swirl-shaped flow structures have been observed throughout the solar atmosphere, in both emission and absorption, at different altitudes and locations, and are believed to be associated with magnetic structures. However, the distribution patterns of such swirls, especially their spatial positions, remain unclear. Using the Automated Swirl Detection Algorithm (ASDA), we identified swirls from the high-resolution photospheric observations, centered on Fe I 630.25 nm, of a quiet region near the Sun's central meridian by the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope. Through a detailed study of the locations of the detected small-scale swirls with an average radius of 300 km, we found that most of them are located in lanes between mesogranules (which have an average diameter of 5.4 Mm) instead of the commonly believed intergranular lanes. The squared rotation, expansion/contraction, vector…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
