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Chromospheric Structure and Dynamics--ObservationsThe chromosphere is a highly structured dynamic 'layer' of the solar outer atmosphere. Here, not only are the effects of mechanical heating first evident (moving upward in altitude from the deep photosphere), but also the amount of nonradiative energy deposited is far greater than in the albeit much hotter overlying transition region and corona. Further, the chromosphere is by far the thickest zone of the solar atmosphere with respect to the pressure scale height. A major goal of stellar astrophysics is to understand how the chromosphere is heated and why it adopts its peculiar structure. A cursory examination of solar filtergrams and high-resolution movies demonstrates that much of the chromospheric "action" must be occurring on fine spatial scales and short times; particularly in the cell interior transient brightenings, but also in the longer-lived network fragments. That regime of investigation is far removed from what one usually associates with "synoptic" measurements. Nevertheless, synoptic observations of chromospheric indices, filtergrams, and globally-averaged profile parameters (e.g., for Ca II) not only can provide important insight concerning the crucial role of the cycle-variable part of the solar magnetic field; but they also can forge a key link with analogous measurements of the stars, where often the phenomena can be significantly exaggerated from the solar case, but high spatial resolution reconnaissance is not even a remote possibility. In addition to discussing the synoptic aspects of chromospheric structure and dynamics, I will summarize new insights into the general problem of the solar chromosphere that have been obtained recently with the SUMER far-ultraviolet spectrometer on SOHO.
Document ID
19990114311
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Ayres, Thomas R.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO United States)
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1997
Publication Information
Publication: Synoptic Solar Physics
Volume: 140
Subject Category
Astronomy
Meeting Information
Meeting: NSO Sacramento Peak Summer Workshop
Location: Sunspot, NM
Country: United States
Start Date: September 8, 1997
End Date: September 12, 1997
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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