Bibcode
Asensio-Ramos, A.; Manso-Sainz, R.; Martínez-González, M. J.; Viticchié, B.; Orozco-Suárez, D.; Socas-Navarro, H.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 748, Issue 2, article id. 83 (2012).
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4
2012
Journal
Citations
17
Refereed citations
17
Description
Inferring magnetic and thermodynamic information from
spectropolarimetric observations relies on the assumption of a
parameterized model atmosphere whose parameters are tuned by comparison
with observations. Often, the choice of the underlying atmospheric model
is based on subjective reasons. In other cases, complex models are
chosen based on objective reasons (for instance, the necessity to
explain asymmetries in the Stokes profiles) but it is not clear what
degree of complexity is needed. The lack of an objective way of
comparing models has, sometimes, led to opposing views of the solar
magnetism because the inferred physical scenarios are essentially
different. We present the first quantitative model comparison based on
the computation of the Bayesian evidence ratios for spectropolarimetric
observations. Our results show that there is not a single model
appropriate for all profiles simultaneously. Data with moderate
signal-to-noise ratios (S/Ns) favor models without gradients along the
line of sight. If the observations show clear circular and linear
polarization signals above the noise level, models with gradients along
the line are preferred. As a general rule, observations with large S/Ns
favor more complex models. We demonstrate that the evidence ratios
correlate well with simple proxies. Therefore, we propose to calculate
these proxies when carrying out standard least-squares inversions to
allow for model comparison in the future.
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