Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
- marktownley
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Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Saturday afternoon brought some brighter spells, we're in a westerly airstream coming off the Atlantic at the moment that brought long streamers of cumulus clouds, the alignment of these bands make all the difference; get stuck under one and it is overcast for sometime or get in between bands and lovely sunshine. As the edge of the bands got closer to the sun in the sky the seeing went down hill as instability with the rising airmass kicked in. So, very much a case of picking the moment to image.
First off a full disk with a Lunt50 etalon double stacked with a Daystar Quark, inspired by Stephanes lovely onband full disks I tried a click over on the Quark dial, which seemed to give me darker filaments on the disk. With these essentially blank disks it is tricky to drop on the tunung, I think i'm close with this.
Ha-FD-DS-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
Ha-FD-DS-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
At first sight the sun appears blank, but there is more going on than seems. First there is the small prom that viewer sketched earlier in the day viewtopic.php?f=4&t=26466 . Then we have a few filaments, most of these are mid latitudes in both hemispheres which indicates they are associated with sub surface magnetic jet streams of cycle 25. What was apparent to me though was the brighter mottling at both poles which are associated with polar faculae, which Pepe got in white light yesterday too viewtopic.php?f=4&t=26469
I think to understand what is going on it helps to look in other wavelengths, with AIA193 being a good choice:
You can see at each pole there is a dark patch which is the polar coronal holes - an area where the magnetic field lines are weaker and it is easier for material to flow out into space. Here we see the polar faculae, magnetic flux regions that are not strong enough to form pores or sunspots. Polar faculae are dominant in solar minima conditions, where we are now, as the the poles magnetic fields are stable. During solar maxima we do not see polar faculae as the poles at this point undergo magnetic field reversal at this point of the cycle and so polar faculae are not able to form. I got a closer look of the northern polar region with the SM90 double stacked with the Quark.
polar-faculae-north-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
polar-faculae-north-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
The polar faculae show as bright points in white light on the photosphere, but here higher up in the chromosphere in Ha they look like little jets shooting upwards. The line of filaments on the bottom of the image is the cycle 25 jet stream, I like the little loop that is visible on the left!
Looking at the AIA193 image there are hints that both polar coronal holes are showing signs of a tenuous link, however on the departing limb by the equator a rash of bright points were visible. These are indicative of cycle 24 activity, but were easily seen.
plage-w-limb-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
plage-w-limb-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
Would have liked to have taken more images, however took a load of data and this was what was usuable, rest was soft and chucked away. Hoping to get a few more images today too weather behaving again!
Hope you like.
Mark
First off a full disk with a Lunt50 etalon double stacked with a Daystar Quark, inspired by Stephanes lovely onband full disks I tried a click over on the Quark dial, which seemed to give me darker filaments on the disk. With these essentially blank disks it is tricky to drop on the tunung, I think i'm close with this.
Ha-FD-DS-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
Ha-FD-DS-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
At first sight the sun appears blank, but there is more going on than seems. First there is the small prom that viewer sketched earlier in the day viewtopic.php?f=4&t=26466 . Then we have a few filaments, most of these are mid latitudes in both hemispheres which indicates they are associated with sub surface magnetic jet streams of cycle 25. What was apparent to me though was the brighter mottling at both poles which are associated with polar faculae, which Pepe got in white light yesterday too viewtopic.php?f=4&t=26469
I think to understand what is going on it helps to look in other wavelengths, with AIA193 being a good choice:
You can see at each pole there is a dark patch which is the polar coronal holes - an area where the magnetic field lines are weaker and it is easier for material to flow out into space. Here we see the polar faculae, magnetic flux regions that are not strong enough to form pores or sunspots. Polar faculae are dominant in solar minima conditions, where we are now, as the the poles magnetic fields are stable. During solar maxima we do not see polar faculae as the poles at this point undergo magnetic field reversal at this point of the cycle and so polar faculae are not able to form. I got a closer look of the northern polar region with the SM90 double stacked with the Quark.
polar-faculae-north-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
polar-faculae-north-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
The polar faculae show as bright points in white light on the photosphere, but here higher up in the chromosphere in Ha they look like little jets shooting upwards. The line of filaments on the bottom of the image is the cycle 25 jet stream, I like the little loop that is visible on the left!
Looking at the AIA193 image there are hints that both polar coronal holes are showing signs of a tenuous link, however on the departing limb by the equator a rash of bright points were visible. These are indicative of cycle 24 activity, but were easily seen.
plage-w-limb-bw by Mark Townley, on Flickr
plage-w-limb-colour by Mark Townley, on Flickr
Would have liked to have taken more images, however took a load of data and this was what was usuable, rest was soft and chucked away. Hoping to get a few more images today too weather behaving again!
Hope you like.
Mark
http://brierleyhillsolar.blogspot.co.uk/
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Thanks, your explanations help a lot to understand the reality of our star.
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Beautiful images and very instructive commentary, Mark. I learned something new today. Thank you !
Franco
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Thanks guys!
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
What we really want to see on your images - are the cycle-25 quite certain signs !
Nice images, Mark
Valery
Nice images, Mark
Valery
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Good information, Mark and nice images.
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Superb images Mark and a thoroughly interesting narrative, I always look forward to your posts
Alexandra
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Mark:
Thanks for the info and for the clean crisp shots.
Regards,
Eric.
Thanks for the info and for the clean crisp shots.
Regards,
Eric.
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Thanks everyone for the kind words! Thunder and lightning today, so did some more ebay selling instead of solar...
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Fine images, Mark. I too use my Quark to darken filaments through my Lunt-mod scope, my results depend much on finding the best matching tuning of both systems, not always easy to do.
Raf
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Agreed: Beautiful shots and informative narrative.
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Aeries D-ERF
Quark Chromosphere f27 native, (f14 when focal reduced)
Mallincam .5x focal reducer (large format)
12nm Filter
ZWO174 (IMX249 chip 5um)
Huge Sense of Adventure Viewing Creation
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Very nice session Mark...these images came out very well
Brian
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ASI1600MM, ASI432MM, ASI294MM Pro, ASI174MM, ASI462MM
Maple Ridge Observatory
Cambray, ON Canada
Photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/185395281@N08/albums
10'x15 Roll-off Roof Observatory
Takahashi EM400 Mount carrying:
C14 + Lunt 80ED
Deep Sky Work - ASI294MM Pro+EFW 7x36/Canon 60D (Ha mod), ONAG
Planetary Work - SBIG CFW10, ASI462MM
2.2m Diameter Dome
iOptron CEM70G Mount carrying:
Orion EON 130ED, f7 OTA for Day & Night Use
Ha Setup: Lunt LS80PT/LS75FHa/B1200Ha + Home Brew Lunt Double Stack/B1800Ha on the Orion OTA + Daystar Quantum
WL, G-Band & CaK Setup: Lunt Wedge & Lunt B1800CaK, Baader K-Line and Altair 2nm G-Band filter
ASI1600MM, ASI432MM, ASI294MM Pro, ASI174MM, ASI462MM
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Re: Saturday Sun, Polar Faculae and Bright Points - 17th August
Great session and images Mark. Polar faculae and bright spots are very interesting features
Pedro Re'
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