Indications of shock waves in the solar photosphere
J. Rybák (1),
H. Wöhl (2),
A. Kucera (1),
A. Hanslmeier (3),
O. Steiner (2)
1 - Astronomical Institute, Slovak Academy of Sciences, SK-05960 Tatranská Lomnica,
Slovakia
2 - Kiepenheuer-Institute für Sonnenphysik, Schöneckstr. 6, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany
3 - Institut for Geophysics, Astrophysics and Meteorology, Universitätsplatz 5,
A-8010 Graz, Austria
High resolution observations of solar granulation
near the solar limb are used in a search for hydrodynamic
shocks caused by an abrupt braking of the fast (probably supersonic)
horizontal flow of the granular plasma towards the intergranular lane.
Shock signatures in the spectral line of Fe II 6456.38 A of one
particular observed shock event are investigated in detail.
Evolution, amplitude, and spatial relation of the spectral line
characteristics of the shock event are in agreement with predictions from
numerical simulations for such shock phenomena in the solar photosphere.
The dimensions and amplitudes of the observed shock signatures
are comparable to predicted values when seeing and
instrumental effects as well as a possible obliqueness of the shock
front with respect to the observer's line-of-sight are taken into account.
The temporal evolution of such an event is observed for the first time.
The stable and declining phase of the event were studied
for a time period of almost 2 minutes.
A particular relationship was found between the shock event and
a nearby G-band bright point located 2 arcsec from the shock event.
It is suggestive that the observed shock is a
causal consequence of the magnetic flux concentration, traced
by the G-band bright point.
Such a type of shock can appear outside the flux concentrations
as a consequence of a rapid flux-tube motion.
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