1. Photospheric Magnetic Fields of the Trailing Sunspots in Active Region NOAA 12396
- Author
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Verma, M., Balthasar, H., Denker, C., Böhm, F., Fischer, C. E., Kuckein, C., Manrique, S. J. González, Sobotka, M., González, N. Bello, Diercke, A., Berkefeld, T., Collados, M., Feller, A., Hofmann, A., Lagg, A., Nicklas, H., Suárez, D. Orozco, Yabar, A. Pastor, Rezaei, R., Schlichenmaier, R., Schmidt, D., Schmidt, W., Sigwarth, M., Solanki, S. K., Soltau, D., Staude, J., Strassmeier, K. G., Volkmer, R., von der Lühe, O., and Waldmann, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The solar magnetic field is responsible for all aspects of solar activity. Sunspots are the main manifestation of the ensuing solar activity. Combining high-resolution and synoptic observations has the ambition to provide a comprehensive description of the sunspot growth and decay processes. Active region NOAA 12396 emerged on 2015 August 3 and was observed three days later with the 1.5-meter GREGOR solar telescope on 2015 August 6. High-resolution spectropolarimetric data from the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) are obtained in the photospheric Si I $\lambda$ 1082.7 nm and Ca I $\lambda$1083.9 nm lines, together with the chromospheric He I $\lambda$1083.0 nm triplet. These near-infrared spectropolarimetric observations were complemented by synoptic line-of-sight magnetograms and continuum images of the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) and EUV images of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in "Solar Polarization Workshop 8", ASP Proceedings, Luca Belluzzi (eds.)
- Published
- 2018