General
Magnetic fields are at the base of star formation and stellar structure and evolution. When stars are born, magnetic fields brake the rotation during the collapse of the mollecular cloud. In the end of the life of a star, magnetic fields can play a key role in the form of the strong winds that lead to the last stages of stellar evolution. During the whole adult life of a star, magnetic fields are the origin of stellar activity. Our Sun has magnetic fields that give rise to such spectacular activity that impacts the climate on Earth. The magnetic activity in other stars is, in some cases, of orders of magnitude more intense than the solar one, influencing – often drastically – the transport of chemical species and angular momentum, as well as affecting the possible planetary systems around them.
The aim of this project is the study of the diverse manifestations of the magnetic field that can be observed in the solar atmosphere and in other stars. These include distinct structures as sunspots, weak quiet-sun fields or chromospheric and coronal features such as filaments and prominences. The following research topics have been gradually faced:
Solar magnetism
1. Structure and evolution of Sunspot magnetic fields.
2. Structure and evolution of quiet Sun magnetic fields.
3. Structure and evolution of the magnetism of the chromosphere and of chromospheric strcutures (promiences, spicules,...)
4. Structure and evolution or coronal loops.
5. Structure and evolution of the Sun's global field. Studies of the activity cycle.
6. Empirical study of propagation of magnetohydrodynamic waves in magnetic structures.
7. Empirical study of energy transfer mechanisms related with the heating of the external atmospheric layers.
8. Empirical study of the influence of partial ionisation in the dynamics of the solar atmosphere.
9. Participation in the European Solar Telescope project.
Stellar magnetism
1. Development of numerical tools to diagnose stellar magnetic fields, both in the surface and in the chromsphere.
2. Study of magnetic fields in stellar prominences.
3. Study of the role of magnetic fields in the late stages of stellar evolution.
Members
Results
- Spiral waves in sunspots: They have been interpreted as magnetoacoustic waves propagating from the interior to the atmosphere following the direction of the magnetic field. We have characterized the magnetic field topology, dismissing the twist of the field lines as the cause of the spiral shape (Felipe et al. 2019).
- Magnetic response to umbral flashes: Simultaneous spectropolarimetric observations of the chromospheric He I 10830 and Ca II 8542 lines have been used to estimate the fluctuations of the magnetic field associated to shock waves. The shocks cause expansion of the magnetic field lines (Houston et al. 2018, including A. Asensio Ramos).
Scientific activity
Related publications
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Returning magnetic flux in sunspot penumbraeAims: We study the presence of reversed polarity magnetic flux in sunspot penumbra. Methods: We applied a new regularized method to deconvolve spectropolarimetric data observed with the spectropolarimeter SP onboard Hinode. The new regularization is based on a principal component decomposition of the Stokes profiles. The resulting Stokes profilesAsensio-Ramos, A. et al.
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12013 -
Wave Leakage and Resonant Absorption in a Loop Embedded in a Coronal ArcadeWe investigate the temporal evolution of impulsively generated perturbations in a potential coronal arcade with an embedded loop. For the initial configuration we consider a coronal loop, represented by a density enhancement, which is unbounded in the ignorable direction of the arcade. The linearized time-dependent magnetohydrodynamic equationsBallester, J. L. et al.
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12013 -
Comet McNaught C/2006 P1: observation of the sodium emission by the solar telescope THEMISComet McNaught C/2006 P1 was the brightest comet of the last forty years when reaching its perihelion at an heliocentric distance of 0.17Â AU. Two days before this perihelion, at an heliocentric distance of 0.2Â AU, Themis, a French-Italian solar telescope in the Canary Islands, Spain, observed the Comet sodium emission of McNaught. The measuredSainz Dalda, A. et al.
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42008 -
The 1.5 meter solar telescope GREGORThe 1.5 m telescope GREGOR opens a new window to the understanding of solar small-scale magnetism. The first light instrumentation includes the Gregor Fabry Pérot Interferometer (GFPI), a filter spectro-polarimeter for the visible wavelength range, the GRating Infrared Spectro-polarimeter (GRIS) and the Broad-Band Imager (BBI). The excellentSchmidt, W. et al.
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112012 -
GRIS: The GREGOR Infrared SpectrographThis paper describes the main characteristics of GRIS (GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph), the grating spectrograph installed in the recently inaugurated (May 2012) 1.5-meter GREGOR telescope located at the Observatorio del Teide in Tenerife. The spectrograph has a standard Czerny-Turner configuration with parabolic collimator and camera mirrors thatCollados, M. et al.
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112012 -
The GREGOR Fabry-Pérot InterferometerThe GREGOR Fabry-Pérot Interferometer (GFPI) is one of three first-light instruments of the German 1.5-meter GREGOR solar telescope at the Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain. The GFPI uses two tunable etalons in collimated mounting. Thanks to its large-format, high-cadence CCD detectors with sophisticated computer hard- and software it isPuschmann, K. G. et al.
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112012 -
Solar Fe abundance and magnetic fields. Towards a consistent reference metallicityAims: We investigate the impact on Fe abundance determination of including magnetic flux in series of 3D radiation-magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) simulations of solar convection, which we used to synthesize spectral intensity profiles corresponding to disc centre. Methods: A differential approach is used to quantify the changes in theoreticalFabbian, D. et al.
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122012 -
Properties of convective motions in facular regionsAims: We study the properties of solar granulation in a facular region from the photosphere up to the lower chromosphere. Our aim is to investigate the dependence of granular structure on magnetic field strength. Methods: We used observations obtained at the German Vacuum Tower Telescope (Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife) using two differentKostik, R. et al.
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92012 -
Resolving the Internal Magnetic Structure of the Solar NetworkWe analyze the spectral asymmetry of Stokes V (circularly polarized) profiles of an individual network patch in the quiet Sun observed by Sunrise/IMaX. At a spatial resolution of 0farcs15-0farcs18, the network elements contain substructure which is revealed by the spatial distribution of Stokes V asymmetries. The area asymmetry between the red andMartínez-González, M. J. et al.
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102012 -
LEMUR: Large European module for solar Ultraviolet Research. European contribution to JAXA's Solar-C missionThe solar outer atmosphere is an extremely dynamic environment characterized by the continuous interplay between the plasma and the magnetic field that generates and permeates it. Such interactions play a fundamental role in hugely diverse astrophysical systems, but occur at scales that cannot be studied outside the solar system. Understanding thisTeriaca, Luca et al.
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102012 -
Anomalous Circular Polarization Profiles in the He I 1083.0 nm Multiplet from Solar SpiculesWe report Stokes vector observations of solar spicules and a prominence in the He I 1083 nm multiplet carried out with the Tenerife Infrared Polarimeter. The observations show linear polarization profiles that are produced by scattering processes in the presence of a magnetic field. After a careful data reduction, we demonstrate the existence ofMartínez-González, M. J. et al.
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112012 -
Hanle Effect for Stellar Dipoles and QuadrupolesWe derive exact expressions for the degree of lineal polarization over a resolved or integrated stellar disc due to resonance scattering and the Hanle effect from a dipolar or quadrupolar distribution of magnetic fields. We apply the theory of scattering polarization within the formalism of the spherical tensors representation for the densityManso-Sainz, R. et al.
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112012 -
Fast events and waves in an active region of the Sun observed in Hα with high spatial resolutionContext: We study the chromosphere of an active region of the Sun in the Hα line. Aims: The development of new instrumentation and new methods of data analysis allows to scrutinize the dynamics of the solar chromosphere with high spatial, spectral, and temporal resolution. The observations we present shed light on some magneto-dynamic processesSánchez-Andrade Nuño, B. et al.
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82008 -
Detection of sea-serpent field lines in sunspot penumbraeAims:We investigate the spatial distribution of magnetic polarities in the penumbra of a spot observed very close to disk center. Methods: High angular and temporal resolution magnetograms taken with the Narrowband Filter Imager aboard Hinode are used in this study. They provide continuous and stable measurements in the photospheric Fe I 630.25Sainz Dalda, A. et al.
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42008 -
The solar Ba{II} 4554 Å line as a Doppler diagnostic: NLTE analysis in 3D hydrodynamical modelAims: The aim of this paper is to analyse the validity of the Dopplergram and λ-meter techniques for the Doppler diagnostics of solar photospheric velocities using the Ba II 4554 Å line. Methods: Both techniques are evaluated by means of NLTE radiative transfer calculations of the Ba II 4554 Å line in a three-dimensional hydrodynamical model ofShchukina, N. G. et al.
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112009 -
Solar granulation from photosphere to low chromosphere observed in Ba II 4554 Å lineAims: The purpose of this paper is to characterize the statistical properties of solar granulation in the photosphere and low chromosphere up to 650 km. Methods: We use velocity and intensity variations obtained at different atmospheric heights from observations in Ba II 4554 Å. The observations were done during good seeing conditions at the VTT atKostik, R. et al.
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112009 -
Simulations of Magnetoacoustic Pulsations in Atmospheres of Rapidly Oscillating Ap StarsRapidly oscillating Ap (roAp) stars exhibit an astrophysically interesting combination of strong, dipolar-like magnetic fields and high-overtone p-mode pulsations similar to the Sun. Recent time-resolved spectroscopy of these stars unravelled a complex picture of propagating magnetoacoustic pulsation waves, with amplitude and phase stronglyKhomenko, E. et al.
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102009 -
Morphology and evolution of umbral dots and their substructuresContext: Substructures - dark lanes and tails - of umbral dots (UDs) were predicted by numerical simulations of magnetoconvection and have been detected later in some observations. Aims: To provide constraints for realistic theoretical models of sunspot umbrae, we describe the observed properties and evolutionary characteristics of UDs (includingSobotka, M. et al.
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92009 -
Numerical simulations of conversion to Alfvén waves in solar active regionsWe study the coupling of magneto-acoustic waves to Alvén waves using 2.5D numerical simulations. In our experiment, a fast magnetoacoustic wave of a given frequency and wavenumber is generated below the surface. The magnetic field in the domain is assumed homogeneous and inclined. The efficiency of the conversion to Alfvén waves near the layer ofKhomenko, E. et al.
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12011 -
Modeling the Subsurface Structure of SunspotsWhile sunspots are easily observed at the solar surface, determining their subsurface structure is not trivial. There are two main hypotheses for the subsurface structure of sunspots: the monolithic model and the cluster model. Local helioseismology is the only means by which we can investigate subphotospheric structure. However, as current linearMoradi, H. et al.
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112010