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Analysis of the Forward-scattering Hanle Effect in the Ca I 4227 Å Line

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dc.contributor.author Anusha, L. S
dc.contributor.author Nagendra, K. N
dc.contributor.author Bianda, M
dc.contributor.author Stenflo, J. O
dc.contributor.author Holzreuter, R
dc.contributor.author Sampoorna, M
dc.contributor.author Frisch, H
dc.contributor.author Ramelli, R
dc.contributor.author Smitha, H. N
dc.date.accessioned 2011-09-07T10:40:24Z
dc.date.available 2011-09-07T10:40:24Z
dc.date.issued 2011-08-20
dc.identifier.citation The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 737, No. 2, 95 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/5548
dc.description Open Access en
dc.description.abstract Coherent scattering of limb-darkened radiation is responsible for the generation of the linearly polarized spectrum of the Sun (the Second Solar Spectrum). This Second Solar Spectrum is usually observed near the limb of the Sun, where the polarization amplitudes are largest. At the center of the solar disk the linear polarization is zero for an axially symmetric atmosphere. Any mechanism that breaks the axial symmetry (like the presence of an oriented magnetic field, or resolved inhomogeneities in the atmosphere) can generate a non-zero linear polarization. In the present paper we study the linear polarization near the disk center in a weakly magnetized region, where the axisymmetry is broken. We present polarimetric (I, Q/I, U/I, and V/I) observations of the Ca I 4227 Å line recorded around μ = cos θ = 0.9 (where θ is the heliocentric angle) and a modeling of these observations. The high sensitivity of the instrument (ZIMPOL-3) makes it possible to measure the weak polarimetric signals with great accuracy. The modeling of these high-quality observations requires the solution of the polarized radiative transfer equation in the presence of a magnetic field. For this we use standard one-dimensional model atmospheres. We show that the linear polarization is mainly produced by the Hanle effect (rather than by the transverse Zeeman effect), while the circular polarization is due to the longitudinal Zeeman effect. A unique determination of the full $\bm {B}$ vector may be achieved when both effects are accounted for. The field strengths required for the simultaneous fitting of Q/I, U/I, and V/I are in the range 10-50 G. The shapes and signs of the Q/I and U/I profiles are highly sensitive to the orientation of the magnetic field. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher IOP Publishing en
dc.relation.uri http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X/737/2/95/ en
dc.rights © IOP Publishing en
dc.subject Line: formation en
dc.subject Magnetic fields en
dc.subject Polarization en
dc.subject Scattering en
dc.subject Sun: atmosphere en
dc.title Analysis of the Forward-scattering Hanle Effect in the Ca I 4227 Å Line en
dc.type Article en


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