Bibcode
Asensio Ramos, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 494, Issue 1, 2009, pp.287-294
Fecha de publicación:
1
2009
Revista
Número de citas
5
Número de citas referidas
5
Descripción
Aims: We estimate the minimum length on which solar granulation can be
considered to be a Markovian process. Methods: We measure the
variation in the bright difference between two pixels in images of the
solar granulation for different distances between the pixels. This
scale-dependent data is empirically analyzed to find the minimum scale
on which the process can be considered Markovian. Results: The
results suggest that the solar granulation can be considered to be a
Markovian process on scales longer than r_M=300-500 km. On longer length
scales, solar images can be considered to be a Markovian stochastic
process that consists of structures of size r_M. Smaller structures
exhibit correlations on many scales simultaneously yet cannot be
described by a hierarchical cascade in scales. An analysis of the
longitudinal magnetic-flux density indicates that it cannot be a Markov
process on any scale. Conclusions: The results presented in this
paper constitute a stringent test for the realism of numerical
magneto-hydrodynamical simulations of solar magneto-convection. In
future exhaustive analyse, the non-Markovian properties of the magnetic
flux density on all analyzed scales might help us to understand the
physical mechanism generating the field that we detect in the solar
surface.
Proyectos relacionados
Magnetismo, Polarización y Transferencia Radiativa en Astrofísica
Los campos magnéticos están presentes en todos los plasmas astrofísicos y controlan la mayor parte de la variabilidad que se observa en el Universo a escalas temporales intermedias. Se encuentran en estrellas, a lo largo de todo el diagrama de Hertzsprung-Russell, en galaxias, e incluso quizás en el medio intergaláctico. La polarización de la luz
Tanausú del
Pino Alemán