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Dive into the research topics where Keiichi Matsuzaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Keiichi Matsuzaki.


Science | 2007

Continuous plasma outflows from the edge of a solar active region as a possible source of solar wind

Taro Sakao; Ryouhei Kano; Noriyuki Narukage; Jun'ichi Kotoku; Takamasa Bando; Edward E. DeLuca; Loraine Louise Lundquist; Saku Tsuneta; Louise K. Harra; Yukio Katsukawa; Masahito Kubo; Hirohisa Hara; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Masumi Shimojo; Jay A. Bookbinder; Leon Golub; Kelly Elizabeth Korreck; Yingna Su; Kiyoto Shibasaki; Toshifumi Shimizu; Ichiro Nakatani

The Sun continuously expels a huge amount of ionized material into interplanetary space as the solar wind. Despite its influence on the heliospheric environment, the origin of the solar wind has yet to be well identified. In this paper, we report Hinode X-ray Telescope observations of a solar active region. At the edge of the active region, located adjacent to a coronal hole, a pattern of continuous outflow of soft-x-ray–emitting plasmas was identified emanating along apparently open magnetic field lines and into the upper corona. Estimates of temperature and density for the outflowing plasmas suggest a mass loss rate that amounts to ∼1/4 of the total mass loss rate of the solar wind. These outflows may be indicative of one of the solar wind sources at the Sun.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

The Magnetic Landscape of the Sun's Polar Region

Saku Tsuneta; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; Yukio Katsukawa; Bruce W. Lites; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Shin’ichi Nagata; D. Orozco Suárez; Toshifumi Shimizu; Masumi Shimojo; R. A. Shine; Y. Suematsu; T. Suzuki; Theodore D. Tarbell; A. M. Title

We present observations of the magnetic landscape of the polar region of the Sun that are unprecedented in terms of spatial resolution, field of view, and polarimetric precision. They were carried out with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode. Using a Milne-Eddington inversion, we find many vertically oriented magnetic flux tubes with field strengths as strong as 1 kG scattered in latitude between 70° and 90°. They all have the same polarity, consistent with the global polarity of the polar region. The field vectors are observed to diverge from the centers of the flux elements, consistent with a view of magnetic fields that are expanding and fanning out with height. The polar region is also found to have ubiquitous horizontal fields. The polar regions are the source of the fast solar wind, which is channeled along unipolar coronal magnetic fields whose photospheric source is evidently rooted in the strong-field, vertical patches of flux. We conjecture that vertical flux tubes with large expansion around the photospheric-coronal boundary serve as efficient chimneys for Alfven waves that accelerate the solar wind.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2007

Hinode Calibration for Precise Image Co-Alignment between SOT and XRT (2006 November-2007 April)

Toshifumi Shimizu; Yukio Katsukawa; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; R. Kano; Edward E. DeLuca; Loraine Louise Lundquist; Mark Alan Weber; Theodore D. Tarbell; Richard Shine; Mitsuru Sôma; Saku Tsuneta; Taro Sakao; Kenji Minesugi

To understand the physical mechanisms for activity and heating in the solar atmosphere, the magnetic coupling from the photosphere to the corona is an important piece of information from the Hinode observations, and therefore precise positional alignment is required among the data acquired by different telescopes. The Hinode spacecraft and its onboard telescopes were developed to allow us to investigate magnetic coupling with co-alignment accuracy better than 1 00 .U sing the Mercury transit observed on 2006 November 8 and co-alignment measurements regularly performed on a weekly basis, we have determined the information necessary for precise image co-alignment, and have confirmed that co-alignment better than 1 00 can be realized between Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) and X-Ray Telescope (XRT) with our baseline co-alignment method. This paper presents results from the calibration for precise co-alignment of CCD images from SOT and XRT.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2007

Velocity Structure of Jets in a Coronal Hole

Suguru Kamio; Hirohisa Hara; Tetsuya Watanabe; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Kazunari Shibata; Len Culhane; Harry Warren

The velocity structures of jets in a coronal hole have been derived for the first time. Hinode observations revealed the existence of many bright points in coronal holes. They are loop-shaped and sometimes associated with coronal jets. Spectra obtained with the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer aboard Hinode were analyzed to infer the Doppler velocity of bright loops and jets in a coronal hole of the north polar region. Elongated jets above bright loops are found to be blue-shifted by 30 km s 1 at maximum, while foot points of bright loops are red-shifted. Blue-shifts detected in coronal jets are interpreted as being upflows produced by magnetic reconnection between emerging flux and the ambient field in the coronal hole.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Image stabilization system on SOLAR-B Solar Optical Telescope

Toshifumi Shimizu; Shin'ichi Nagata; Chris Edwards; Theodore D. Tarbell; Yasuhiro Kashiwagi; Kazuhide Kodeki; Osamu Ito; Hiroyuki Miyagawa; Masayuki Nagase; Syunsaku Inoue; Kazumasa Kaneko; Yasushi Sakamoto; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; Saku Tsuneta; Shiro Miki; Makoto Endo; Masaki Tabata; Toshitaka Nakaoji; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Ken Kobayashi; Masashi Otsubo; Yoshinori Suematsu; K. Kumagai; Motokazu Noguchi; Tomonori Tamura; Masao Nakagiri

Extremely stable pointing of the telescope is required for images on the CCD cameras to accurately measure the nature of magnetic field on the sun. An image stabilization system is installed to the Solar Optical Telescope onboard SOLAR-B, which stabilizes images on the focal plane CCD detectors in the frequency range lower than about 20Hz. The system consists of a correlation tracker and a piezo-based tip-tilt mirror with servo control electronics. The correlation tracker is a high speed CCD camera with a correlation algorithm on the flight computer, producing a pointing error from series of solar granule images. Servo control electronics drives three piezo actuators in the tip-tilt mirror. A unique function in the servo control electronics can put sine wave form signals in the servo loop, allowing us to diagnose the transfer function of the servo loop even on orbit. The image stabilization system has been jointly developed by collaboration of National Astronomical Observatory of Japan/Mitsubishi Electronic Corp. and Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory. Flight model was fabricated in summer 2003, and we measured the system performance of the flight model on a laboratory environment in September 2003, confirming that the servo stability within 0-20 Hz bandwidth is 0.001-0.002 arcsec rms level on the sun.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Design progress of the solar UV-Vis-IR telescope (SUVIT) aboard SOLAR-C

Yukio Katsukawa; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; Y. Suematsu; Hirohisa Hara; Ryouhei Kano; Toshifumi Shimizu; Keiichi Matsuzaki

We present a design progress of the Solar UV-Vis-IR Telescope (SUVIT) aboard the next Japanese solar mission SOLAR-C. SUVIT has an aperture diameter of ~1.4 m for achieving spectro-polarimetric observations with spatial and temporal resolution exceeding the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope (SOT). We have studied structural and thermal designs of the optical telescope as well as the optical interface between the telescope and the focal plane instruments. The focal plane instruments are installed into two packages, filtergraph and spectrograph packages. The spectropolarimeter is the instrument dedicated to accurate polarimetry in the three spectrum windows at 525 nm, 854 nm, and 1083 nm for observing magnetic fields at both the photospheric and chromospheric layers. We made optical design of the spectrograph accommodating the conventional slit spectrograph and the integral field unit (IFU) for two-dimensional coverage. We are running feasibility study of the IFU using fiber arrays consisting of rectangular cores.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Focal plane CCD camera for the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) aboard SOLAR-B

Taro Sakao; Ryouhei Kano; Hirohisa Hara; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Masumi Shimojo; Saku Tsuneta; Takeo Kosugi; Kiyoto Shibasaki; K. Kumagai; M. Sawa; Tomonori Tamura; Satoru Iwamura; Mitsuhiko Nakano; Zhangong Du; Kenji Hiyoshi; M. Horii; Leon Golub; Jay A. Bookbinder; Peter Cheimets; Lawrence D. Hill; Jerry K. Owens

We present scientific as well as engineering overview of the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) aboard the Japanese Solar-B mission to be launched in 2006, with emphasis on the focal plane CCD camera that employs a 2k x 2k back-thinned CCD. Characterization activities for the flight CCD camera made at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) are discussed in detail with some of the results presented.


Solar Physics | 2007

The Hinode (Solar-B) Mission: An Overview

Takeo Kosugi; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Taro Sakao; Toshifumi Shimizu; Y. Sone; S. Tachikawa; T. Hashimoto; Kenji Minesugi; Akira Ohnishi; T. Yamada; Saku Tsuneta; Hirohisa Hara; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; Y. Suematsu; Masumi Shimojo; T. Watanabe; Sadanori Shimada; John M. Davis; L. D. Hill; Jerry K. Owens; A. M. Title; J. L. Culhane; L. K. Harra; G. A. Doschek; Leon Golub


Solar Physics | 2008

Image Stabilization System for Hinode (Solar-B) Solar Optical Telescope

Toshifumi Shimizu; Shin’ichi Nagata; S. Tsuneta; Theodore D. Tarbell; C. Edwards; R. A. Shine; C. Hoffmann; E. Thomas; S. Sour; R. Rehse; Osamu Ito; Yasuhiro Kashiwagi; Masaki Tabata; Kazuhide Kodeki; M. Nagase; Keiichi Matsuzaki; Ken Kobayashi; Kiyoshi Ichimoto; Yoshinori Suematsu


Solar Physics | 2008

The Hinode X-Ray Telescope (XRT): Camera Design, Performance and Operations

R. Kano; Taro Sakao; Hirohisa Hara; Saku Tsuneta; Keiichi Matsuzaki; K. Kumagai; Masumi Shimojo; Kenji Minesugi; K. Shibasaki; E. E. DeLuca; Leon Golub; Jay A. Bookbinder; D. Caldwell; Peter N. Cheimets; J. Cirtain; E. Dennis; T. Kent; Mark Alan Weber

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Hirohisa Hara

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Masumi Shimojo

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Taro Sakao

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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