823 research outputs found
Solar and Galactic Cosmic Rays observed by SOHO
Both the Cosmic Ray Flux (CRF) and Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs) have left
an imprint on SOHO technical systems. While the solar array efficiency degraded
irreversibly down to ~77% of its original level over roughly 1 1/2 solar
cycles, Single Event Upsets (SEUs) in the solid state recorder (SSR) have been
reversed by the memory protection mechanism. We compare the daily CRF observed
by the Oulu station with the daily SOHO SEU rate and with the Degradation curve
of the solar arrays. The Oulu CRF and the SOHO SSR SEU rate are both modulated
by the solar cycle and are highly correlated, except for sharp spikes in the
SEU rate, caused by isolated SEP events, which also show up as discontinuities
in the otherwise slowly decreasing solar ray efficiency. This allows to
discriminate between effects with solar and non-solar origin and to compare the
relative strength of both. We find that during solar cycle 23 (1996 Apr 1 --
2008 Aug 31) only 6% of the total number of SSR SEUs were caused by SEPs; the
remaining 94% were due to galactic cosmic rays. During the maximum period of
cycle 23 (2000 Jan 1 -- 2003 Dec 31), the SEP contribution increased to 22%,
and during 2001, the year with the highest SEP rate, to 30%. About 40% of the
total solar array degradation during the 17 years from Jan 1996 through Feb
2013 can be attributed to proton events, i.e. the effect of a series of
short-lived, violent SEP events is comparable to the cycle-integrated damage by
cosmic rays.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures accepted for publication in Cent. Eur. Astrophys.
Bul
The coronal convection
We study the hydrogen Lyman emission in various solar features - now
including Lyman-alpha observations free from geocoronal absorption - and
investigate statistically the imprint of flows and of the magnetic field on the
line profile and radiance distribution. As a new result, we found that in
Lyman-alpha rasters locations with higher opacity cluster in the cell interior,
while the network has a trend to flatter profiles. Even deeper self reversals
and larger peak distances were found in coronal hole spectra. We also compare
simultaneous Lyman-alpha and Lyman-beta profiles. There is an obvious
correspondence between asymmetry and redshift for both lines, but, most
surprisingly, the asymmetries of Lyman-alpha and Lyman-beta are opposite. We
conclude that in both cases downflows determine the line profile, in case of
Lyman-alpha by absorption and in the case of Ly-beta by emission. Our results
show that the magnetically structured atmosphere plays a dominating role in the
line formation and indicate the presence of a persisting downflow at both
footpoints of closed loops. We claim that this is the manifestation of a
fundamental mass transportation process, which Foukal back in 1978 introduced
as the 'coronal convection'.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Cent. Eur. Astrophys.
Bul
Hydrogen Lyman emission through the solar cycle
We present observations and results of radiance and irradiance studies
completed by SoHO-SUMER during the past solar cycle. We find that the cycle
variation in Ly-alpha irradiance as observed by e.g. UARS-SOLSTICE can not be
explained by quiet sun radiance data, and conclude that the explanation must be
related to differences in the Ly-alpha radiance of various solar features and
changes in their fractional distribution over the solar cycle. Consequently, we
studied the emission of the hydrogen Ly-alpha line in various solar features -
for the first time observed by SUMER on disk in full resolution - to
investigate the imprint of the magnetic field on line profile and radiance
distribution. We also compare quasi-simultaneous Ly-alpha and Ly-beta line
profiles. Such high-resolution observations - not hampered by geocoronal
absorption - have never been completed before.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to appear in "Understanding a peculiar Solar
Minimum", eds. S Cranmer, T.Hoeksema, J. Kohl, ASPC 201
Solar transition region in the quiet Sun and active regions
The solar transition region (TR), in which above the photosphere the tempera-
ture increases rapidly and the density drops dramatically, is believed to play
an important role in coronal heating and solar wind acceleration. Long-lasting
up-flows are present in the upper TR and interpreted as signatures of mass
supply to large coronal loops in the quiet Sun. Coronal bright points (BPs) are
local heating phenomena and we found a different Doppler-shift pattern at TR
and coronal temperatures in one BP, which might be related to the twisted loop
system. The dominant energy loss in the lower TR is the Ly-alpha emission. It
has been found that most Ly-alpha radiance profiles are stronger in the blue
peak, an asymmetry opposite to higher order Lyman lines. This asymmetry is
stronger when the downflow in the middle TR is stronger, indicating that the TR
flows play an important role in the line formation process. The peak separation
of Ly-alpha is found to be larger in coronal holes than in the quiet Sun,
reflecting the different magnetic structures and radiation fields between the
two regions. The Lyman line profiles are found to be not reversed in sunspot
plume and umbra regions, while they are obviously reversed in the surrounding
plage region. At TR temperatures, the densities of the sunspot plume and umbra
are a factor of 10 lower than of the plage, indicating that the sunspot plasma
emitting at TR temperatures is higher and possibly more extended above sunspots
than above the plage region.Comment: This paper has been withdrawn by the author because it's not a
referred pape
Microflaring of a solar Bright point
A solar X-ray Bright point (BP) was observed with the SUMER-spectrograph of
the SOHO-observatory. The data consist of four far-UV spectral lines formed
between 2 10^4 - 6 10^5 K, with 2 arcsec spatial, 2.8 min temporal and 4 km/s
spectral resolution. A striking feature is the strong microflaring and
appearance of several short lived transients. Using simultaneous magnetic field
measurements the region observed seemed to lie above a cancelling flux region.
With respect to the filling factor and emission measure this particular BP was
similar to the average surface of a moderately active solar type star.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, in press Astronomy and Astrophysics; for Fig.3 it
is recommended to download separately the colour version h3653f3.pd
The SUMER Lyman-alpha line profile in quiescent prominences
Aims: Out of a novel observing technique, we publish for the first time,
SoHO-SUMER observations of the true spectral line profile of hydrogen
Lyman-alpha in quiescent prominences. With SoHO not being in Earth orbit, our
high-quality data set is free from geocoronal absorption. We study the line
profile and compare it with earlier observations of the higher Lyman lines and
recent model predictions. Methods: We applied the reduced-aperture observing
mode to two prominence targets and started a statistical analysis of the line
profiles in both data sets. In particular, we investigated the shape of the
profile, the radiance distribution and the line shape-to-radiance
interrelation. We also compare Ly-a data to co-temporal 1206 Si III data.
Results: We find that the average profile of Ly-a has a blue-peak dominance and
is more reversed, if the line-of-sight is perpendicular to the field lines. The
contrast of Ly-a prominence emission rasters is very low and the radiance
distribution differs from the log-normal distribution of the disk. Features
seen in the Si III line are not always co-spatial with Ly-a emission.
Conclusions: Our empirical results support recent multi-thread models, which
predict that asymmetries and depths of the self-reversal depend on the
orientation of the prominence axis relative to the line-of-sight.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication as A&A lette
Cool and hot components of a coronal bright point
We performed a systematic study of the Doppler shifts and electron densities
measured in an EUV bright point (hereafter BP) observed in more than 10 EUV
lines with formation temperatures from log (T/K) p 4.5 to 6.3. Those parts of a
BP seen in transition region and coronal lines are defined as its cool and hot
components, respectively. We find that the transition from cool to hot occurs
at a temperature around log (T/K) p 5.7. The two components of the BP reveal a
totally different orientation and Doppler-shift pattern, which might result
from a twist of the associated magnetic loop system. The analysis of magnetic
field evolution and topology seems to favor a two-stage heating process, in
which magnetic cancellation and separator reconnection are powering,
respectively, the cool and hot components of the BP. We also found that the
electron densities of both components of the BP are higher than those of the
surrounding quiet Sun, and comparable to or smaller than active region
densities.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Upflows in funnel-like legs of coronal magnetic loops
The prominent blue shifts of Ne viii associated with the junctions of the
magnetic network in the quiet Sun are still not well understood. By comparing
the coronal magnetic-field structures as obtained by a potential-field
reconstruction with the conspicuous blue-shift patches on the dopplergram of Ne
viii as observed in an equatorial quiet-Sun region, we find that most of the
regions with significant upflow are associated with the funnel-like legs of
magnetic loops and co-spatial with increments of the line width. These
quasi-steady upflows can be regarded as the signatures of mass supply to
coronal loops. By using the square-root of the line intensity as a proxy for
the plasma density, the mass flux of the upflow in each funnel can be
estimated. We find that the mass flux is anti-correlated with the funnel's
expansion factor as determined from the extrapolated magnetic field. One of the
loop systems is associated with a coronal bright point, which was observed by
several instruments and exhibited various morphologies in different wavelengths
and viewing directions. A remarkable agreement between its magnetic structure
and the associated EUV emission pattern was found, suggesting an almost
potential-field nature of the coronal magnetic field. We also report the direct
detection of a small-scale siphon flow by both STEREO satellites. However, this
transient siphon flow occurred in a weak mixed-polarity-field region, which was
outside the adjacent magnetic funnel, and thus it is perhaps not related to
plasma upflow in the funnel. Based on these observations, we suggest that at
upper-TR temperatures the dominant flows in quiet-Sun coronal loops are
long-lasting upflows rather than siphon flows. We also discuss the implications
for coronal heating and unresolved magnetic structures.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Ap
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Intentions versus enactment: making sense of policy and practice for teaching English as an additional language
This article examines the relationship between policy and practice for the teaching of children with English as an additional language (EAL) in English schools. It contributes original insights into how teachers are supported or restricted in developing the nuances of pedagogy needed for children new to English. The reported research took place against a backdrop of rising numbers of migrant children with EAL in English schools, partnered with a significant reduction in educational funding for these children and a limited focus on EAL in educational policy. Policy documents for EAL from two contrasting but contiguous periods of government were compared through an intertextual lens, and this was set alongside responses to a survey of teachers about their sense-making of policies and practices for EAL. Findings contribute to much-needed practical understanding of how policy enactment in practice may be divorced from policy makers’ intentions. Outcomes provide a timely evidence-base which enhances our grasp of the complexity of teachers’ professional lives in relation to children from different linguistic backgrounds. Moreover, analysis uncovers where policymakers’ discourse reflects how children with EAL are perceived and received in their host countries during a period of hitherto unseen high levels of migration
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