scholarly journals The Structure of the White-Light Corona at the 1991 Eclipse

1994 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 217-221
Author(s):  
A. Sanchez-Ibarra ◽  
M. Cisneros-Molina ◽  
G. Hinojosa-Palafox ◽  
F. Cisneros-Peña ◽  
J. Guerrero de La Torre ◽  
...  

The total solar eclipse of July 11, 1991 was observed from “La Matanza”, Baja California Sur, México, only 5 km south of the center line of totality, with several small instruments intended to obtain images of the corona during totality, and using a range of exposure times which allowed us to detect both the inner and outer corona. Relations between large and fine scale structures of the corona, the photospheric and chromospheric activity, and the presence of coronal holes are presented.

2016 ◽  
Vol 771 ◽  
pp. 012008
Author(s):  
Irfan Imaduddin ◽  
Evan I Akbar ◽  
Gerhana P Putri

1998 ◽  
Vol 167 ◽  
pp. 201-204
Author(s):  
B.H. Foing ◽  
J.E. Wiik ◽  
L. Duvet ◽  
N. Henrich ◽  
S. Cravatte ◽  
...  

AbstractWe report results on solar prominences from our observations of the November 3, 1994 total solar eclipse from the North Chile alteplano. From the military base at Putre, we used our transportable CCD camera and telescope, as well as support photographic digitised observations from Putre and Parinacota volcano. The variation of density and equivalent temperature were derived in coronal holes (plumes and interplumes) and in equatorial streamers. We obtained images from the inner to the outer corona, as well as low-resolution spectra of prominences and of the inner corona. We present the analysis of images and spectra of prominences in the Balmer, He I and Ca II lines, and in the Thomson scattered continuum.


1994 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 541-547
Author(s):  
J. Sýkora ◽  
J. Rybák ◽  
P. Ambrož

AbstractHigh resolution images, obtained during July 11, 1991 total solar eclipse, allowed us to estimate the degree of solar corona polarization in the light of FeXIV 530.3 nm emission line and in the white light, as well. Very preliminary analysis reveals remarkable differences in the degree of polarization for both sets of data, particularly as for level of polarization and its distribution around the Sun’s limb.


2020 ◽  
Vol 495 (2) ◽  
pp. 2170-2178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vojtech Rušin ◽  
Paul Prikryl ◽  
Emil A Prikryl

ABSTRACT Light and dark adaptation and luminance contrast enhancement are well-known characteristics of human vision that allow us to observe a wide range of light intensity not fully captured in standard camera images. The naked-eye observations of total eclipses, some recorded with spectacular detail in artists’ paintings, reveal structure that is consistent with images obtained by telescopes equipped with recording media. The actual shape of the corona during a total eclipse depends not only on the phase of the solar cycle but, as can be simply demonstrated, also on the day-to-day variability and spatial distribution of coronal intensity that is determined by solar surface magnetic fields, including the locations of coronal holes that are the sources of high-speed solar wind causing geomagnetic storms. The latter were very similar for the eclipses in 1932, 1994, and 2017, which is the main reason why the naked-eye observations, as well as the processed images (1994 and 2017), of the white-light corona displayed very similar shapes. White-light corona image processing is a useful technique to enhance the contrast to observe fine-scale structure that is consistent with the physics of the solar atmosphere shaped by the magnetic field drawn out into the interplanetary space by solar wind.


2019 ◽  
pp. 83-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Merzlyakov ◽  
Ts. Tsvetkov ◽  
L. Starkova ◽  
R. Miteva

Ground-based total solar eclipse observations are still the key method for coronal investigations. The question about its white-light degree of polarization remains unanswered. There are hypotheses claiming that the degree of polarization in certain regions of the corona may be higher than the maximal theoretically predicted value determined by Thomson scattering. We present polarization of the white-light solar corona observations obtained by three different teams during the March 29, 2006 solar total eclipse. We give an interpretation on how the polarization of the sky impacts brightness of the polarized solar corona, depending on the landscape during the totality. Moreover, it is shown that the singular polarization points of the corona are in linear dependence with the height of the Sun above the horizon.


1994 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 565-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Takeda ◽  
H. Kurokawa ◽  
R. Kitai ◽  
K. Ishiura

Extended AbstractThe Kwasan and Hida Observatories team (three of the authors but A. T.) observed the total solar eclipse of 11 July, 1991 with the multi-channel telescope at UABCS (Universidad Autonoma de Baja California Sur) campus in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The primary purpose of our obsevation is to get high-resolution images of the inner corona at the wavelength of coronal emission lines and continuum shown in Table 1. Thanks to the clear sky and good seeing condition, we successfully got many images of high spatial resolution with photographic cameras and video recorders. Details of the observation have already been published by Kurokawaet al. (1992). In this paper, we present the results obtained from the photographic data reduction on fine structures of the inner corona. The procedure of photometrical measurement and image processing are fully described in another paper (Takeda, 1993).There have been published several observational works on the temperature structure of the coronal loops. Some authors proposed that hot coronal loops have cool cores (Foukal, 1975; Hanaokaet al., 1988), but others denied such coaxial models (Chenget al., 1980; Dere, 1982). Our high-resolution images obtained at the eclipse enables us to compare the positions of the loops seen in different emission lines of different ionization temperatures more precisely than any other previous observations. Main results are summarized as follows.


2019 ◽  
Vol 632 ◽  
pp. A86 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Koutchmy ◽  
F. Baudin ◽  
Sh. Abdi ◽  
L. Golub ◽  
F. Sèvre

Context. The origin of the high temperature of the solar corona, in both the inner bright parts and the more outer parts showing flows toward the solar wind, is not understood well yet. Total eclipses permit a deep analysis of both the inner and the outer parts of the corona using the continuum white-light (W-L) radiations from electrons (K-corona), the superposed spectrum of forbidden emission lines from ions (E-corona), and the dust component with F-lines (F-corona). Aims. By sufficiently dispersing the W-L spectrum, the Fraunhofer (F) spectrum of the dust component of the corona appears and the continuum Thomson radiation can be evaluated. The superposed emission lines of ions with different degrees of ionization are studied to allow the measurement of temperatures, non-thermal velocities, Doppler shifts, and abundances to constrain the proposed heating mechanisms and understand the origin of flows that lead to solar wind. Methods. We describe a slit spectroscopic experiment of high spectral resolution to provide an analysis of the most typical parts of the quasi-minimum type corona observed during the total solar eclipse of Aug. 21, 2017 from Idaho, USA. Streamers, active region enhancements, and polar coronal holes (CHs) are measured well using deep spectra. Results. Sixty spectra are obtained during the totality with a long slit, covering ±3 solar radii in the range of 510 nm to 590 nm. The K+F continuum corona is exposed well up to two solar radii. The F-corona can be measured even at the solar limb. New weak emission lines were discovered or confirmed. The rarely observed Ar X line is detected almost everywhere; the Fe XIV and Ni XIII lines are clearly detected everywhere. For the first time hot lines are also measured inside the CH regions. The radial variations of the non-thermal turbulent velocities of the lines do not show a great departure from the average values. No significantly large Doppler shifts are seen anywhere in the inner or the middle corona. The wings of the Fe XIV line show some non-Gaussianity. Conclusions. Deep slit coronal spectra offered an opportunity for diagnosing several aspects of coronal physics during a well observed total eclipse without extended investments. The analysis of the ionic emission line profiles offers several powerful diagnostics of the coronal dynamics; the precise measurement of the F-continuum component provides insight into the ubiquitous dust corona at the solar limb.


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