Bibcode
Bellot Rubio, L. R.; Collados, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.406, p.357-362 (2003)
Fecha de publicación:
7
2003
Revista
Número de citas
31
Número de citas referidas
26
Descripción
We present numerical experiments aimed at understanding why
near-infrared observations systematically deliver weak magnetic fields
in the internetwork, whereas analyses based on visible lines indicate
that kG fields are ubiquitous. Synthetic noisy Stokes V profiles of the
iron lines at 6302 Å and 1.565 mu m have been produced under
varying conditions in an effort to simulate polarized spectra coming
from the internetwork. An inversion technique has been applied to the
profiles, as it is usually done with real observations, in order to
derive the distribution of magnetic fields in the simulated region. Our
results show that infrared lines yield distributions which are very
similar to those used as input for the simulation, while visible lines
are to a large extent affected by noise. Analyses based on the Fe I
lines at 6302 Å may lead to an overabundance of kG fields if the
signal-to-noise ratio in Stokes V is poorer than about 10. A particular
example is shown where strong fields are retrieved in nearly 30% of the
pixels of a simulated internetwork region in which only fields of 200 G
exist.