Differential rotation of the solar atmosphere as determined from millimeter data
β Scribed by Sou-Yang Liu; M. R. Kundu
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 434 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0038-0938
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β¦ Synopsis
Radiospectroheliograms obtained at millimeter wavelengths were used to determine the rotation of the solar atmosphere. Regions observed in both emission as well as absorption (associated with Ha dark filaments) were followed across the disk. The average sidereal rotation rate deduced from emissive regions is given by w (deg day -1) = 14.152(β’ sin E B, where B is the heliographic latitude and the quoted errors are the standard deviations of a least squares fit to the data. The rate deduced from absorption regions is given by to = 14.729(β’177 sin E B. This rate is larger than that of emissive regions at all latitudes and shows smaller differential rotation. This apparent difference in the rotation rates is probably due to the difference in the height of formation of the emissive and absorption regions. This difference could be used to estimate the difference in height between an emissive region and an absorption feature in millimeter radiation.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Using two original copies of Hevelius' 'Selenographia' and reducing spot positions with two different methods, we found that the solar angular rotation velocity at the beginning of the Maunder minimum was about the same as today. The gradient of the differential rotation was slightly steeper than gi