586 research outputs found
The Economic Recession: Early Impacts on Health Care Safety Net Providers
Examines how the recession and state and local budget cuts affected safety-net clinics' capacity to meet demand in five communities, the extent to which federal stimulus funds mitigated the impact, strategies for sustainability, and implications
Flow Field Evolution of a Decaying Sunspot
We study the evolution of the flows and horizontal proper motions in and
around a decaying follower sunspot based on time sequences of two-dimensional
spectroscopic observations in the visible and white light imaging data obtained
over six days from June~7 to~12, 2005. During this time period the sunspot
decayed gradually to a pore. The spectroscopic observations were obtained with
the Fabry-P\'{e}rot based Visible-Light Imaging Magnetograph (VIM) in
conjunction with the high-order adaptive optics (AO) system operated at the 65
cm vacuum reflector of the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). We apply local
correlation tracking (LCT) to the speckle reconstructed time sequences of
white-light images around 600 nm to infer horizontal proper motions while the
Doppler shifts of the scanned \FeI line at 630.15 nm are used to calculate
line-of-sight (LOS) velocities with sub-arcsecond resolution. We find that the
dividing line between radial inward and outward proper motions in the inner and
outer penumbra, respectively, survives the decay phase. In particular the moat
flow is still detectable after the penumbra disappeared. Based on our
observations three major processes removed flux from the sunspot: (a)
fragmentation of the umbra, (b) flux cancelation of moving magnetic features
(MMFs; of the same polarity as the sunspot) that encounter the leading opposite
polarity network and plages areas, and (c) flux transport by MMFs (of the same
polarity as the sunspot) to the surrounding network and plage regions that have
the same polarity as the sunspot.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, The Astrophysical Journal, accepted September,
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Cartes de dangers et aménagement du territoire : rapport thématique dans le cadre du projet « Impacts des inondations en Suisse. Processus d'apprentissage, gestion du risque et aménagement du territoire, Projet SBF C05.0143
Spatial distribution and statistical properties of small-scale convective vortex-like motions in a quiet Sun region
High-resolution observations of a quiet Sun internetwork region taken with
the Solar 1-m Swedish Telescope in La Palma are analyzed. We determine the
location of small-scale vortex motions in the solar photospheric region by
computing the horizontal proper motions of small-scale structures on time
series of images. These plasma convectively-driven swirl motions are associated
to: (1) downdrafts (that have been commonly explained as corresponding to sites
where the plasma is cooled down and hence returned to the interior below the
visible photospheric level), and (2) horizontal velocity vectors converging
into a central point. The sink cores are proved to be the final destination of
passive floats tracing plasma flows towards the center of each vortex. We
establish the occurrence of these events to be 1.4 x 10^(-3) and 1.6 x 10^(-3)
vortices Mm^(-2) min^(-1) respectively for two time series analyzed here.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Societ
Magnetohydrostatic atmospheres
We show that the atmospheric and magnetic height variations are coupled in
general MHS equilibria with gravity when isolated thin non-force-free flux
tubes are present. In gas-dominated environments, as in stellar photospheres,
flux tubes must expand rapidly with height to maintain pressure balance with
the cool surroundings. But in magnetically dominated environments, as in
stellar coronae, the large-scale background magnetic field determines the
average spreading of embedded flux tubes, and rigidly held flux tubes {\it
require} a specific surrounding atmosphere with a unique temperature profile
for equilibrium. The solar static equilibrium atmosphere exhibits correct
transition-region properties and the accepted base coronal temperature for the
sun's main magnetic spherical harmonic. Steady flows contribute to the overall
pressure, so equilibria with accelerated wind outflows are possible as well.
Flux tubes reflect a mathematical degeneracy in the form of non-force-free
fields, which leads to coupling in general equilibrium conditions. The
equilibrium state characterizes the system average in usual circumstances and
dynamics tend to maintain the MHS atmosphere. Outflows are produced everywhere
external to rigidly held flux tubes that refill a depleted or cool atmosphere
to the equilibrium gas profile, heating the gas compressively.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted by A&
Horizontal supergranule-scale motions inferred from TRACE ultraviolet observations of the chromosphere
We study horizontal supergranule-scale motions revealed by TRACE observation
of the chromospheric emission, and investigate the coupling between the
chromosphere and the underlying photosphere. A highly efficient
feature-tracking technique called balltracking has been applied for the first
time to the image sequences obtained by TRACE (Transition Region and Coronal
Explorer) in the passband of white light and the three ultraviolet passbands
centered at 1700 {\AA}, 1600 {\AA}, and 1550 {\AA}. The resulting velocity
fields have been spatially smoothed and temporally averaged in order to reveal
horizontal supergranule-scale motions that may exist at the emission heights of
these passbands. We find indeed a high correlation between the horizontal
velocities derived in the white-light and ultraviolet passbands. The horizontal
velocities derived from the chromospheric and photospheric emission are
comparable in magnitude. The horizontal motions derived in the UV passbands
might indicate the existence of a supergranule-scale magnetoconvection in the
chromosphere, which may shed new light on the study of mass and energy supply
to the corona and solar wind at the height of the chromosphere. However, it is
also possible that the apparent motions reflect the chromospheric brightness
evolution as produced by acoustic shocks which might be modulated by the
photospheric granular motions in their excitation process, or advected partly
by the supergranule-scale flow towards the network while propagating upward
from the photosphere. To reach a firm conclusion, it is necessary to
investigate the role of granular motions in the excitation of shocks through
numerical modeling, and future high-cadence chromospheric magnetograms must be
scrutinized.Comment: 5 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
On mesogranulation, network formation and supergranulation
We present arguments which show that in all likelihood mesogranulation is not
a true scale of solar convection but the combination of the effects of both
highly energetic granules, which give birth to strong positive divergences
(SPDs) among which we find exploders, and averaging effects of data processing.
The important role played by SPDs in horizontal velocity fields appears in the
spectra of these fields where the scale 4 Mm is most energetic; we
illustrate the effect of averaging with a one-dimensional toy model which shows
how two independent non-moving (but evolving) structures can be transformed
into a single moving structure when time and space resolution are degraded.
The role of SPDs in the formation of the photospheric network is shown by
computing the advection of floating corks by the granular flow. The coincidence
of the network bright points distribution and that of the corks is remarkable.
We conclude with the possibility that supergranulation is not a proper scale of
convection but the result of a large-scale instability of the granular flow,
which manifests itself through a correlation of the flows generated by SPDs.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Hydrodynamical simulations of convection-related stellar micro-variability. II. The enigmatic granulation background of the COROT target HD49933
Local-box hydrodynamical model atmospheres provide statistical information
about a star's emergent radiation field which allows one to predict the level
of its granulation-related micro-variability. Space-based photometry is now
sufficiently accurate to test model predictions. We aim to model the
photometric granulation background of HD49933 as well as the Sun, and compare
the predictions to the measurements obtained by the COROT and SOHO satellite
missions. We construct hydrodynamical model atmospheres representing HD49933
and the Sun, and use a previously developed scaling technique to obtain the
observable disk-integrated brightness fluctuations. We further performed
exploratory magneto-hydrodynamical simulations to gauge the impact of small
scale magnetic fields on the synthetic light-curves. We find that the
granulation-related brightness fluctuations depend on metallicity. We obtain a
satisfactory correspondence between prediction and observation for the Sun,
validating our approach. For HD49933, we arrive at a significant
over-estimation by a factor of two to three in total power. Locally generated
magnetic fields are unlikely to be responsible, otherwise existing fields would
need to be rather strong to sufficiently suppress the granulation signal.
Presently suggested updates on the fundamental stellar parameters do not
improve the correspondence; however, an ad-hoc increase of the HD49933 surface
gravity by about 0.2dex would eliminate most of the discrepancy. We diagnose a
puzzling discrepancy between the predicted and observed granulation background
in HD49933, with only rather ad-hoc ideas for remedies at hand.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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