Fabry-prot versus slit spectropolarimetry of pores and active network: Analysis of ibis and hinode data

Philip G. Judge, Alexandra Tritschler, Han Uitenbroek, Kevin Reardon, Gianna Cauzzi, Alfred De Wijn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

We discuss spectropolarimetric measurements of photospheric (Fe I 630.25nm) and chromospheric (Ca II 854.21nm) spectral lines in and around small magnetic flux concentrations, including a pore. Our long-term goal is to diagnose properties of the magnetic field near the base of the corona. We compare ground-based two-dimensional spectropolarimetric measurements with (almost) simultaneous space-based slit spectropolarimetry. We address the question of noise and crosstalk in the measurements and attempt to determine the suitability of Ca II measurements with imaging spectropolarimeters for the determination of chromospheric magnetic fields. The ground-based observations were obtained 2008 May 20, with the Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) in spectropolarimetric mode operated at the Dunn Solar Telescope at Sunspot, NM. The space observations were obtained with the Spectro-Polarimeter of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Japanese Hinode satellite. The agreement between the near-simultaneous co-spatial IBIS and Hinode Stokes-V profiles at 630.25nm is excellent, with V/I amplitudes compatible to within 1%. The IBIS QU measurements are affected by residual crosstalk from V, arising from calibration inaccuracies, not from any inherent limitation of imaging spectroscopy. We use a Principal Component Analysis to quantify the detected crosstalk. QU profiles with V crosstalk subtracted are in good agreement with the Hinode measurements, but are noisier owing to fewer collected photons. Chromospheric magnetic fields are notoriously difficult to constrain by polarization of Ca II lines alone. However, we demonstrate that high cadence, high angular resolution monochromatic images of fibrils in Ca II and Hα, seen clearly in IBIS observations, can be used to improve the magnetic field constraints, under conditions of high electrical conductivity. Such work is possible only with time series data sets from two-dimensional spectroscopic instruments such as IBIS, under conditions of good seeing.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1486-1497
Number of pages12
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume710
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2010

Keywords

  • Instrumentation: interferometers
  • Instrumentation: polarimeters
  • Sun: chromosphere
  • Sun: photosphere
  • Sun: surface magnetism

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