T. L. Riethmüller
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by T. L. Riethmüller.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
S. K. Solanki; P. Barthol; S. Danilovic; A. Feller; A. Gandorfer; J. Hirzberger; T. L. Riethmüller; M. Schüssler; J. A. Bonet; V. Martínez Pillet; J. C. del Toro Iniesta; V. Domingo; J. Palacios; M. Knölker; N. Bello González; T. Berkefeld; M. Franz; W. Schmidt; Alan M. Title
The SUNRISE balloon-borne solar observatory consists of a 1 m aperture Gregory telescope, a UV filter imager, an imaging vector polarimeter, an image stabilization system, and further infrastructure. The first science flight of SUNRISE yielded high-quality data that revealed the structure, dynamics, and evolution of solar convection, oscillations, and magnetic fields at a resolution of around 100 km in the quiet Sun. After a brief description of instruments and data, the first qualitative results are presented. In contrast to earlier observations, we clearly see granulation at 214 nm. Images in Ca II H display narrow, short-lived dark intergranular lanes between the bright edges of granules. The very small-scale, mixed-polarity internetwork fields are found to be highly dynamic. A significant increase in detectable magnetic flux is found after phase-diversity-related reconstruction of polarization maps, indicating that the polarities are mixed right down to the spatial resolution limit and probably beyond.
Solar Physics | 2011
P. Barthol; A. Gandorfer; S. K. Solanki; M. Schüssler; B. Chares; W. Curdt; W. Deutsch; A. Feller; D. Germerott; B. Grauf; K. Heerlein; J. Hirzberger; M. Kolleck; R. Meller; R. Müller; T. L. Riethmüller; G. Tomasch; M. Knölker; Bruce W. Lites; G. Card; David F. Elmore; J. Fox; A. R. Lecinski; Peter G. Nelson; R. Summers; A. Watt; V. Martínez Pillet; J. A. Bonet; W. Schmidt; T. Berkefeld
The first science flight of the balloon-borne Sunrise telescope took place in June 2009 from ESRANGE (near Kiruna/Sweden) to Somerset Island in northern Canada. We describe the scientific aims and mission concept of the project and give an overview and a description of the various hardware components: the 1-m main telescope with its postfocus science instruments (the UV filter imager SuFI and the imaging vector magnetograph IMaX) and support instruments (image stabilizing and light distribution system ISLiD and correlating wavefront sensor CWS), the optomechanical support structure and the instrument mounting concept, the gondola structure and the power, pointing, and telemetry systems, and the general electronics architecture. We also explain the optimization of the structural and thermal design of the complete payload. The preparations for the science flight are described, including AIV and ground calibration of the instruments. The course of events during the science flight is outlined, up to the recovery activities. Finally, the in-flight performance of the instrumentation is discussed.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
A. Lagg; S. K. Solanki; T. L. Riethmüller; V. Martínez Pillet; M. Schüssler; J. Hirzberger; A. Feller; J. M. Borrero; W. Schmidt; J. C. del Toro Iniesta; J. A. Bonet; P. Barthol; T. Berkefeld; V. Domingo; A. Gandorfer; M. Knölker; Alan M. Title
Until today, the small size of magnetic elements in quiet-Sun areas has required the application of indirect methods, such as the line-ratio technique or multi-component inversions, to infer their physical properties. A consistent match to the observed Stokes profiles could only be obtained by introducing a magnetic filling factor that specifies the fraction of the observed pixel filled with magnetic field. Here, we investigate the properties of a small magnetic patch in the quiet Sun observed with the IMaX magnetograph on board the balloon-borne telescope SUNRISE with unprecedented spatial resolution and low instrumental stray light. We apply an inversion technique based on the numerical solution of the radiative transfer equation to retrieve the temperature stratification and the field strength in the magnetic patch. The observations can be well reproduced with a one-component, fully magnetized atmosphere with a field strength exceeding 1 kG and a significantly enhanced temperature in the mid to upper photosphere with respect to its surroundings, consistent with semi-empirical flux tube models for plage regions. We therefore conclude that, within the framework of a simple atmospheric model, the IMaX measurements resolve the observed quiet-Sun flux tube.
Solar Physics | 2011
A. Gandorfer; B. Grauf; P. Barthol; T. L. Riethmüller; S. K. Solanki; B. Chares; W. Deutsch; S. Ebert; A. Feller; D. Germerott; K. Heerlein; J. Heinrichs; D. Hirche; J. Hirzberger; M. Kolleck; R. Meller; R. Müller; R. Schäfer; G. Tomasch; M. Knölker; V. Martínez Pillet; J. A. Bonet; W. Schmidt; T. Berkefeld; B. Feger; Frank Heidecke; Dirk Soltau; A. Tischenberg; A. Fischer; Alan M. Title
We describe the design of the Sunrise Filter Imager (SuFI) and the Image Stabilization and Light Distribution (ISLiD) unit onboard the Sunrise balloon borne solar observatory. This contribution provides the necessary information which is relevant to understand the instruments’ working principles, the relevant technical data, and the necessary information about calibration issues directly related to the science data.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008
V. Zakharov; J. Hirzberger; T. L. Riethmüller; S. K. Solanki; Philippe Kobel
Aims. We study the recently discovered twisting motion of bright penumbral filaments with the aim of constraining their geometry and the associated magnetic field. Methods. A large sunspot located 40 ◦ from disk center was observed at high resolution with the 1-m Swedish Solar Telescope. Inversions of multi-wavelength polarimetric data and speckle reconstructed time series of continuum images were used to determine proper motions, as well as the velocity and magnetic structure in penumbral filaments. Results. The continuum movie reveals apparent lateral motions of bright and dark structures inside bright filaments oriented parallel to the limb, confirming recent Hinode results. In these filaments we measure upflows of ≈1. 1k m s −1 on their limbward side and weak downflows on their centerward side. The magnetic field in them is significantly weaker and more horizontal than in the adjacent dark filaments. Conclusions. The data indicate the presence of vigorous convective rolls in filaments with a nearly horizontal magnetic field. These are separated by filaments harbouring stronger, more vertical fields. Because of reduced gas pressure, we see deeper into the latter. When observed near the limb, the disk-centerward side of the horizontal-field filaments appear bright due to the hot wall effect known from faculae. We estimate that the convective rolls transport most of the energy needed to explain the penumbral radiative flux.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
T. L. Riethmüller; S. K. Solanki; V. Martínez Pillet; J. Hirzberger; A. Feller; J. A. Bonet; N. Bello González; M. Franz; M. Schüssler; P. Barthol; T. Berkefeld; J. C. del Toro Iniesta; V. Domingo; A. Gandorfer; M. Knölker; W. Schmidt
Bright points (BPs) are manifestations of small magnetic elements in the solar photosphere. Their brightness contrast not only gives insight into the thermal state of the photosphere (and chromosphere) in magnetic elements, but also plays an important role in modulating the solar total and spectral irradiance. Here, we report on simultaneous high-resolution imaging and spectropolarimetric observations of BPs using SUNRISE balloon-borne observatory data of the quiet Sun at the disk center. BP contrasts have been measured between 214 nm and 525 nm, including the first measurements at wavelengths below 388 nm. The histograms of the BP peak brightness show a clear trend toward broader contrast distributions and higher mean contrasts at shorter wavelengths. At 214 nm, we observe a peak brightness of up to five times the mean quiet-Sun value, the highest BP contrast so far observed. All BPs are associated with a magnetic signal, although in a number of cases it is surprisingly weak. Most of the BPs show only weak downflows, the mean value being 240 m s–1, but some display strong down- or upflows reaching a few km s–1.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
S. Jafarzadeh; S. K. Solanki; A. Feller; A. Lagg; A. Pietarila; S. Danilovic; T. L. Riethmüller; V. Martínez Pillet
Aims. We aim to improve our picture of the low chromosphere in the quiet-Sun internetwork by investigating the intensity, horizontal velocity, size and lifetime variations of small bright points (BPs; diameter smaller than 0.3 arcsec) observed in the Ca ii H 3968 A passband along with their magnetic field parameters, derived from photospheric magnetograms. Methods. Several high-quality time series of disc-centre, quiet-Sun observations from the Sunrise balloon-borne solar telescope, with spatial resolution of around 100 km on the solar surface, have been analysed to study the dynamics of BPs observed in the Ca ii H passband and their dependence on the photospheric vector magnetogram signal. Results. Parameters such as horizontal velocity, diameter, intensity and lifetime histograms of the isolated internetwork and magn
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
T. L. Riethmüller; S. K. Solanki; S. V. Berdyugina; M. Schüssler; V. Mart ' inez Pillet; A. Feller; A. Gandorfer; J. Hirzberger
Bright points (BPs) in the solar photosphere are radiative signatures of magnetic elements described by slender flux tubes located in the darker intergranular lanes. They contribute to the ultraviolet (UV) flux variations over the solar cycle and hence may influence the Earths climate. Here we combine high-resolution UV and spectro-polarimetric observations of BPs by the SUNRISE observatory with 3D radiation MHD simulations. Full spectral line syntheses are performed with the MHD data and a careful degradation is applied to take into account all relevant instrumental effects of the observations. It is demonstrated that the MHD simulations reproduce the measured distributions of intensity at multiple wavelengths, line-of-sight velocity, spectral line width, and polarization degree rather well. Furthermore, the properties of observed BPs are compared with synthetic ones. These match also relatively well, except that the observations display a tail of large and strongly polarized BPs not found in the simulations. The higher spatial resolution of the simulations has a significant effect, leading to smaller and more numerous BPs. The observation that most BPs are weakly polarized is explained mainly by the spatial degradation, the stray light contamination, and the temperature sensitivity of the Fe I line at 5250.2 \AA{}. The Stokes
The Astrophysical Journal | 2008
T. L. Riethmüller; S. K. Solanki; A. Lagg
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Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2017
S. K. Solanki; T. L. Riethmüller; P. Barthol; S. Danilovic; W. Deutsch; Hans-Peter Doerr; A. Feller; A. Gandorfer; D. Germerott; Laurent Gizon; B. Grauf; K. Heerlein; J. Hirzberger; M. Kolleck; A. Lagg; R. Meller; G. Tomasch; M. van Noort; J. Blanco Rodríguez; J. L. Gasent Blesa; M. Balaguer Jiménez; J. C. del Toro Iniesta; A. C. Lopez Jimenez; D. Orozco Suárez; T. Berkefeld; C. Halbgewachs; W. Schmidt; Alberto Alvarez-Herrero; L. Sabau-Graziati; I. Pérez Grande
asymmetries of the BPs increase with the distance to their center in both observations and simulations, consistent with the classical picture of a production of the asymmetry in the canopy. This is the first time that this has been found also in the internetwork. Almost vertical kilo-Gauss fields are found for 98 % of the synthetic BPs. At the continuum formation height, the simulated BPs are on average 190 K hotter than the mean quiet Sun, their mean BP field strength is 1750 G, supporting the flux-tube paradigm to describe BPs.