TY - JOUR
T1 - Using the Hanle Effect in Mg ii k to Quantify the Open Flux above the Solar Poles
AU - Hofmann, Ryan A.
AU - Delgado, David Afonso
AU - Centeno, Rebecca
AU - Casini, Roberto
AU - Rempel, Matthias
AU - del Pino Alemán, Tanausú
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/9/10
Y1 - 2025/9/10
N2 - We test the use of the Mg ii resonant lines for measurement of the magnetic field at the top of the chromosphere of polar coronal holes (CHs). The Hanle effect in the core of Mg II k enables access to a regime of field strengths where the Zeeman effect has little diagnostic value (especially at the solar poles, where most of the field is transverse to the line of sight). Synthetic Stokes spectra computed from a radiation magnetohydrodynamic simulation of a CH emulating a high viewing angle are inverted with the HanleRT Tenerife Inversion Code, which accounts for the physical processes that lead to scattering-induced polarization and its modification due to the magnetic field and other symmetry-breaking mechanisms. We find that, while degeneracies in the atmospheric model lead to poor inferences of the thermodynamical properties, the magnetic inferences are highly consistent with the model values. The mean magnetic field strength in the simulation cube is typically retrieved with a relative error of δB ∼ 20% and an absolute error of ΔB ∼ 2 G at the top of the chromosphere. This opens up an avenue for promising chromospheric constraints for magnetic extrapolation models that ingest photospheric magnetograms, whose biases and uncertainties are troublesome to the reconstruction of the heliospheric magnetic field.
AB - We test the use of the Mg ii resonant lines for measurement of the magnetic field at the top of the chromosphere of polar coronal holes (CHs). The Hanle effect in the core of Mg II k enables access to a regime of field strengths where the Zeeman effect has little diagnostic value (especially at the solar poles, where most of the field is transverse to the line of sight). Synthetic Stokes spectra computed from a radiation magnetohydrodynamic simulation of a CH emulating a high viewing angle are inverted with the HanleRT Tenerife Inversion Code, which accounts for the physical processes that lead to scattering-induced polarization and its modification due to the magnetic field and other symmetry-breaking mechanisms. We find that, while degeneracies in the atmospheric model lead to poor inferences of the thermodynamical properties, the magnetic inferences are highly consistent with the model values. The mean magnetic field strength in the simulation cube is typically retrieved with a relative error of δB ∼ 20% and an absolute error of ΔB ∼ 2 G at the top of the chromosphere. This opens up an avenue for promising chromospheric constraints for magnetic extrapolation models that ingest photospheric magnetograms, whose biases and uncertainties are troublesome to the reconstruction of the heliospheric magnetic field.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105015107081
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/adf228
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/adf228
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105015107081
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 990
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 134
ER -