dc.description.abstract |
In this thesis, we study the emergence process of a bipolar solar active region NOAA 11416, a
Hale class βγ/β active region, and reconstruct its global 3D magnetic structure through a novel
image-stacking technique. The emergence began on 8 February 2012, and data was taken through
11 February 2012. Magnetograms from the Solar Dynamics Obersvatory’s (SDO) Helioseismic
and Magnetic Imager (HMI) are used in this study, and we take advantage of the unprecedented
high imagery cadence offered by the observatory. We describe the selection process of observed
candidate active regions covering the full data set since SDO first light. Using this magnetogram
imagery, we visualize the detailed 3D magnetic structure by stacking the high-cadence SDO
imagery and producing 3D isosurface plots, which yield extraordinary detail of the fine magnetic
structure of the AR. The 3D structure shows a distinct “asymmetric Λ” shape to the emerging
flux tube with tilt characteristic of Joy’s Law. This “asymmetric Λ” shape exhibited a differing
slope of the leading and trailing legs, the leading leg being 61° and the trailing leg 52° for an
assumed rise velocity of 100 m/s. Close examination of the 3D structure indicates a highly
fragmented flux rope whose organization appears to increase as the eruption progresses. We also
find that the leading polarity is more fragmented in magnetogram imagery, which appears to support thin flux tube approximations and the results of analastic magneto-hydrodynamic
simulations. Continuum imagery, however, shows the opposite situation, with the leading polarity
being the more cohesive of the two. Additionally, the extracted AR parameters for center motion,
tilt, polarity centroid separation, and flux per polarity are fit to functions, producing mathematical
formulations for the 3D shape and magnetic flux of the flux tube. These functions not only
accurately describe the shape and strength of the flux tube, but their exponential nature allows
predictions of end points in terms of flux (~8x10^21 Mx), centroid separation (59.0 Mm), and
centroid tilt angle (18.5°). We find that both tilt angle evolution and movement of the center fit
well to underdamped harmonic oscillator equations. The former indicates interplay between the
Coriolis force and shear forces resulting from differing Lorentz forces beneath and above the
photosphere, producing an initially anti-Joy’s-law tilt which rapidly changes to tilt following
Joy’s law, overshoots, then settles back towards the final value. The center motion’s
underdamped “overshoot, then settle” behavior, on the other hand, suggests interplay between
magnetic tension of the rising flux tube and convective turbulence. |
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