Temperature fluctuations in the solar photosphere |
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Authors: | P. R. Wilson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics, Boulder, Colo., U. S. A.;(2) Present address: University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | The general problem of interpreting granulation data, in particular Edmonds' r.m.s. intensity fluctuation distribution against heliocentric angle , is discussed.A method is developed for investigating a variety of models of inhomogeneous departures from radiative equilibrium using two dimensional solutions of the equation of radiative transfer, and theoretical r.m.s. intensity fluctuation distributions are computed. It is found that only a very narrow range of models yields distributions which exhibit the essential features of Edmonds' distribution (a center-of-disk value of 14 % and a maximum value of 20.5 % at a heliocentric angle of 53°). The feature of these models is a maximum in the temperature fluctuations of about 660 K r.m.s., which represents a temperature difference between hot and cold regions of 2000 K, at a depth of about 250 km below 5000= 0.03. Below this the temperature fluctuations decrease rapidly in the next 70 km.These results are interpreted in terms of convective and radiative transport of energy. Velocities of the order of 8 km/sec are deduced in the essentially convective regime near 320 km, decreasing through 4 km/sec near the temperature fluctuation maximum to negligible values in the radiative region above 200 km.These features are shown to be consistent with modern theoretical and laboratory studies of convection in incompressible fluids. Further, these studies indicate that a second temperature fluctuation should occur at the bottom of a convective layer. For this reason, further photospheric models are studied in which, below the region of small temperature fluctuations near 320 km, the fluctuations increase sharply. For one of these models a theoretical intensity r.m.s. distribution is obtained which closely fits not only the maximum at = 53° in Edmonds' observed distribution but also the initial decrease and smaller minimum near 24°.Of the National Bureau of Standards and the University of Colorado. |
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