JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-EM 太陽地球系科学・宇宙電磁気学・宇宙環境

[P-EM14] Frontiers in solar physics

コンビーナ:今田 晋亮(名古屋大学宇宙地球環境研究所)、Alphonse Sterling(NASA/MSFC)、横山 央明(東京大学大学院理学系研究科)、清水 敏文(宇宙航空研究開発機構宇宙科学研究所)

[PEM14-08] Initial results from CLASP2 rocket experiment to measure magnetic fields in the solar chromosphere

★Invited Papers

*岡本 丈典1石川 遼子1David McKenzie2Javier Trujillo Bueno3Frederic Auchere4Laurel Rachmeler2鹿野 良平1Donguk Song1Christian Bethge5Ken Kobayashi2吉田 正樹1Tanausu del Pino Aleman3CLASP2 team (1.国立天文台、2.NASA Marshall Space Flight Center、3.Instituto Astrofisica de Canarias、4.Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale、5.Universities Space Research Association)

キーワード:彩層、磁場、観測ロケット実験

The magnetic field in the chromosphere is one of the most important parameters needed to understand the dynamics of the solar atmosphere and to solve the coronal heating problem. To verify a new technique proposed to determine the magnetic field in the upper solar chromosphere, we developed a new instrument, CLASP2 (Chromospheric LAyer SpectroPolarimeter), which allows to measure the four Stokes profiles across the Mg II k and h lines around 280 nm. The launch operation was performed on 2019 April 11 at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, USA. During its suborbital flight, CLASP-2 observed for 6 minutes three targets, including the center of the solar disk for 18 s to calibrate the instrument, a strong plage for 155 s to measure magnetic fields via the Hanle and Zeeman effects, and a quiet limb region for 136 s to measure scattering polarization and its modification through the Hanle and magneto-optical effects.
The spectropolarimetric observations were successfully done and we detected clear polarization signals in the plage and in the quiet limb region. Here we show some preliminary results. First, we confirm the theoretically-predicted scattering polarization pattern across the Mg II k and h lines. The spatial variation of the observed polarization signals encodes information on the magnetic field via the Hanle, Zeeman, and magneto-optical effects. Second, we show clear circular polarization signals in several spectral lines induced by the Zeeman effect, from which we derive the spatio-temporal variations of the line-of-sight field strength in the upper chromosphere. Third, with the slit-jaw instrument, we could observe the predicted broad-band scattering polarization of the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line, including its center-to-limb variation. During the CLASP2 flight, we also carried out coordinated observations with the IRIS and Hinode satellites.