The Baikal Astrophysical Observatory (BAO)

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* 3. A high angular resolution of the telescope enabled to successfully investigate the structure and evolution of the most numerous, but yet poorly-studied optical S flares (area under 2 sq.deg) composing 90% of all the flares on the Sun. A goal was set: to try to realise the flaring process evolution in its pure (relatively simple) manifestation. As a result, such flaring processes were established to occur at the boundaries between the chromospheric and supergranular nets, where one observes an increase in magnetic fields, as well as in emission and other processes. In terms of the evolution features, low-power flares do not differ from major solar flares. They emerge (as well as powerful flares) on the magnetic polarity inversion lines of the longitudinal magnetic field, have the explosive phase, are accompanied by activations and by filament disappearance, feature mutiple bursts of intensity, various-power X-ray emission (including X-class), and also proton fluxes. Among them, there are flares covering sunspot umbrae, two-ribbon, and white flares. The flares tend to group temporally into series and spatially - into flaring activity centres, whose lifetime may reach to four solar rotations. Major optical 2-4 class flares usually occur against a weak activity of minor flares (МFs) or in their absence. On average, 7.8 hr prior to a major flare, МВs cease and may resume not earlier than 6.7 hr after its onset. Herewith, ribbons of major flares evolve in the regions, where there were no МFs or their number was negligible, which causes accumulation of free magnetic energy sufficient for the emergence of a powerful flare. Studying MFs obtained a new impulse in investigating the flares emerging far from sunspots in quiet chromosphere regions. Extraspot flares were established to be accompanied by large-scale chromospheric activations substantially surpassing active regions in size. The magnetic field topology plays the determining role in their evolution. Flaring nodes, as a rule, emerge at the boundaries of the magnetic net in immediate proximity from >80-G magnetic hills, where there were significant magnetic field variations. Extraspot flare ribbons may emerge at a significant distance from the magnetic polarity inversion line. Also, one may not observe separation of ribbons. Based on the analysis of the chromospheric data, proposed was (for the first time) an empirical model elucidating the main stages of the extraspot flare evolution. As a result of studies, there appeared a new interpretation for the MF role in the total solar activity structure. MFs were proven to be not random (background) events on the Sun: they may be addressed as indicators for variations in the magnetic conditions on the Sun, indicating the sites subject to magnetic field disturbances. * 3. A high angular resolution of the telescope enabled to successfully investigate the structure and evolution of the most numerous, but yet poorly-studied optical S flares (area under 2 sq.deg) composing 90% of all the flares on the Sun. A goal was set: to try to realise the flaring process evolution in its pure (relatively simple) manifestation. As a result, such flaring processes were established to occur at the boundaries between the chromospheric and supergranular nets, where one observes an increase in magnetic fields, as well as in emission and other processes. In terms of the evolution features, low-power flares do not differ from major solar flares. They emerge (as well as powerful flares) on the magnetic polarity inversion lines of the longitudinal magnetic field, have the explosive phase, are accompanied by activations and by filament disappearance, feature mutiple bursts of intensity, various-power X-ray emission (including X-class), and also proton fluxes. Among them, there are flares covering sunspot umbrae, two-ribbon, and white flares. The flares tend to group temporally into series and spatially - into flaring activity centres, whose lifetime may reach to four solar rotations. Major optical 2-4 class flares usually occur against a weak activity of minor flares (МFs) or in their absence. On average, 7.8 hr prior to a major flare, МВs cease and may resume not earlier than 6.7 hr after its onset. Herewith, ribbons of major flares evolve in the regions, where there were no МFs or their number was negligible, which causes accumulation of free magnetic energy sufficient for the emergence of a powerful flare. Studying MFs obtained a new impulse in investigating the flares emerging far from sunspots in quiet chromosphere regions. Extraspot flares were established to be accompanied by large-scale chromospheric activations substantially surpassing active regions in size. The magnetic field topology plays the determining role in their evolution. Flaring nodes, as a rule, emerge at the boundaries of the magnetic net in immediate proximity from >80-G magnetic hills, where there were significant magnetic field variations. Extraspot flare ribbons may emerge at a significant distance from the magnetic polarity inversion line. Also, one may not observe separation of ribbons. Based on the analysis of the chromospheric data, proposed was (for the first time) an empirical model elucidating the main stages of the extraspot flare evolution. As a result of studies, there appeared a new interpretation for the MF role in the total solar activity structure. MFs were proven to be not random (background) events on the Sun: they may be addressed as indicators for variations in the magnetic conditions on the Sun, indicating the sites subject to magnetic field disturbances.
* 4. Through the 2D tomography, obtained was frequency curve of chromospheric structures on directions in the AR NOAA 9077 area and revealed were intensive rearrangements of those structures' orientation 15-55 min prior to the flare. The investigations were continued by using the device a multifractal analysis device. The existence of the alternated turbulence (multifractal structure) in the chromosphere and the lower corona of active regions was shown. From synchronous observations in the Hα and FeXI 171 Å of the transition region from the chromosphere to the corona, discovered were quasiperiodic (10-20 min) scaling parameter variations correlating with flares. Applying multifractal segmentation to chromospheric images showed that the sites of the singularity index maxima coincide with the flare foci. Further, the same method was applied, for the first time, to detect new magnetic fluxes and flare activity foci by solar photospheric magnetograms. * 4. Through the 2D tomography, obtained was frequency curve of chromospheric structures on directions in the AR NOAA 9077 area and revealed were intensive rearrangements of those structures' orientation 15-55 min prior to the flare. The investigations were continued by using the device a multifractal analysis device. The existence of the alternated turbulence (multifractal structure) in the chromosphere and the lower corona of active regions was shown. From synchronous observations in the Hα and FeXI 171 Å of the transition region from the chromosphere to the corona, discovered were quasiperiodic (10-20 min) scaling parameter variations correlating with flares. Applying multifractal segmentation to chromospheric images showed that the sites of the singularity index maxima coincide with the flare foci. Further, the same method was applied, for the first time, to detect new magnetic fluxes and flare activity foci by solar photospheric magnetograms.
 +
 +
 +==Full Disk K Call Telescope==
 +K CaII observations enable to estimate a full magnetic flux, as well as to study the nature of rapid changes in large-scale magnetic fields and the magnetic field fine-structure dynamics in polar regions during the polarity reversal of the Sun general magnetic field.
 +
 +The telescope was designed and manufactured at the ISTP SB RAS as per the optical scheme similar to that of the Full Disk Нα Telescope. In the telecentric ray path, there is a Bernhard Halle Nachfl. GmbH interferential and polarization filter with the 0.06-nm half-width of the bandwidth.
 +
 +{|
 +|- valign="top"
 +| style="padding-right: 10px" |
 +[[Image: Calcium1_small.jpg|200px|left]]
 +|
 +''Specifications:''
 +{| class="wikitable"
 +|0.18-m || main objective
 +|-
 +|34' || non-vignetted field of view
 +|-
 +|5.154-m || equivalent focal length
 +|-
 +|1' || estimated spatial resolution
 +|-
 +|48-mm || image diameter
 +|}
 +|}
 +The telescope has been in operation since 1995. Until 2003, the image was recorded on the 80-mm film. In 2003, the optical scheme was changed to record images with the 1704×2272 px Sony CyberShot DSC-S85 digital camera.
 +
[[Category:Research]] [[Category:Research]]
[[ru:Байкальская астрофизическая обсерватория]] [[ru:Байкальская астрофизическая обсерватория]]

Revision as of 03:11, 16 July 2021

Image:baosh0.jpg

The Baikal Astrophysical Observatory (BAO) located in the Settlement of Listvyanka (104°53'30 E, 51°50'47 N), on the southwest shore of Lake Baikal, 70 km from Irkutsk, occupies 51.06 hectares. A large water area of the lake, the existence of a local anticyclonic zone and geographical features of the region enable long periods of the stable quality for images during daytime, particularly in separate seasons.

Mission:

  • Monitoring solar activity to conduct fundamental and applied research within Russian and International scientific programs;
  • Spectral, spectro-polarimetric, and filter observations of non-stationary processes in the solar atmosphere to study mechanisms for their emergence;
  • Developing and testing new devices and instruments.

Telescopes:

  • Large Solar Vacuum Telescope (LSVT);
  • Full Disk Нα (656.3 nm) Telescope;
  • Full Disk K CaII (393.4 nm) Telescope;
  • Solar Telescope for Operative Predictions (of new-generation) STOP-1;
  • Solar Synoptic Telescope (SOLSYT), at the commissioning stage.


Contents

Large Solar Vacuum Telescope (LSVT)

The LSVT is among the top ten largest solar telescopes in the world. It is also on the List of Unique Facilities in the Russian Federation (No. 01-29). USSR AS Correspondent-Member V.E. Stepanov put forward the idea of building such an instrument at Baikal. The telescope has unique optical characteristics enabling to observe fine-structure formations on the Sun at high quality, to study physical processes in the solar atmosphere at high spatial, spectral, and temporal resolutions.

Specifications:

25-m tower height
1-m siderostat mirror
0.76-m main objective
40-m equivalent focal length
32' field-of-view
0.38-m solar image
0.2" spatial resolution

The telescope catadioptric optical system involves a polar 1-m siderostat, two-lens achromatic 0.76-m objective with a 40-m focal length, and a spectrograph. A slant 40-m telescope pipe is within a metal airproof body closed from above and from below by transparent plane-parallel plates. To eliminate air density fluctuation effects on the image quality, there is a special facility enabling to vacuumize the telescope, by reducing pressure inside the pipe to several millimeters of mercury. The LSVT is equipped with a highly-dispersive spectrograph that facilitates to determine physical properties of the solar plasma (travel velocity, chemical composition, magnetic field), as well as to estimate the temperature, microturbulence velocity, and electron density.

Spectrograph specifications:

0.6-m camera mirrors
15-m focal length of camera mirrors
9-m focal length collimating mirror
600 gr/mm 200×300-mm grating
0.0007-nm on-the-job resolution

The spectrograph optical train represents the Ebert-Fastie system with a 15-m focal length. There are two camera mirrors in the spectrograph, which enables to simultaneously record various regions of the solar spectrum. To obtain polarization spectra and calculate the Stokes parameters, the spectral slit is supplied with a rhombohedron and phase plates. Thereby, in the camera section of the spectrograph, four spectra are formed: two spectral regions in different polarizations. Recording the spectra is done by a FLIGrab wide-format (2048×2048 px) CCD-camera. Simultaneously with the spectra, one records the Sun in the Нα in the light reflected from the spectrograph mirror slit with a narrow-band (5 nm) interference-polarization filter and a (512x512 px) Princeton Instruments CCD-camera.

The actual spatial resolution within the telescope-spectrograph suite reaches 0,4". Recently, a team of researchers and enginneers have been upgrading the LSVT, developing an adaptive optics system to improve the image quality.

Main results

The LSVT main observational objects are solar flares. As per the present-day views, at the coronal flare onset, there is an energy release, and then one records chromosphere heating. The heating mechanism related to the flare origin is one of the most compelling scientific challenges. The energy transport from the corona into the chromosphere is possible due to thermal conductivity, X-rays, as well as via beams of charged particles. Although there is no uniform theory for flare formation, the latter mechanism has dominated lately. There are observations exhibiting a good spatial coincidence between X-ray sources and the position of solar-flare emissive cells in the chromosphere. One may elucidate X-rays through electron and proton deceleration in the dense chromospheric layers. Once assumed that beams of particles impinge on the chromosphere radially, the maximal polarization should be observed for the flares that are on the Sun limb, i.e., the spectral line polarization degree should depend on the flare position within the solar disk. The main investigations with the LSVT aim to study the above processes.

Based on observing a great number of solar flares, proven was the existence of shock linear polarization in some solar flares. The difference in the Stokes parameter profiles at various flare regions enabled to estimate the type and energy of energetic particles participating in chromosphere heating, as well as the particle beam penetration depth into the chromospheric layers. These results evidence that, during solar flares, energetic particle fluxes transport energy from the corona into the chromosphere.


Full Disk Нα Telescope

The telescope was designed and made at the ISTP SB RAS in 1980, as per a genuine optical scheme. The instrument was mounted in a stationary tower with a 5-m dome at the 12-m height 150 m from the Baikal shore (75 m above the lake level). Specifications:

0.18-m main objective
5.432-m equivalent focal length
50-mm image diameter
34' non-vignetted field-of-view
0.92" disk-center spatial resolution

In the telecentric ray path, there is an Нα (656.3 nm) Bernhard Halle Nachfl. GmbH interferential and polarization filter with a 0.05-nm half-width of the bandwidth and with a ±0.1 nm shift. Due to the genuine optical scheme, the telescope (as per the main characteristics) does not yield to the American Lockheed Telescope and outperforms the German Opton.

Until 2000, the telescope used an 80-mm film camera. In 2000-2002, a 2048x2048 Princeton Instruments CCD-matrix detector was used in observations. Since 2008, the full-disk chromospheric telescope has been equipped with a C9300-124 Hamamatsu CCD camera with a 2760×4000 detector. The observational archive on films and in e-form is stored at the ISTP SB RAS.

High-angular full-disk observations (including those of over-the-limb structures) enabled to state the following scientific goals:

  • investigating the fine structure of the chromosphere, filaments, and prominences;
  • studying solar flares;
  • monitoring solar activity at the chromosphere level;
  • investigating solar activity complexes;
  • studying the phenomenology of chromospheric formations including the application of fractal methods.

Main results


Full Disk K Call Telescope

K CaII observations enable to estimate a full magnetic flux, as well as to study the nature of rapid changes in large-scale magnetic fields and the magnetic field fine-structure dynamics in polar regions during the polarity reversal of the Sun general magnetic field.

The telescope was designed and manufactured at the ISTP SB RAS as per the optical scheme similar to that of the Full Disk Нα Telescope. In the telecentric ray path, there is a Bernhard Halle Nachfl. GmbH interferential and polarization filter with the 0.06-nm half-width of the bandwidth.

Specifications:

0.18-m main objective
34' non-vignetted field of view
5.154-m equivalent focal length
1' estimated spatial resolution
48-mm image diameter

The telescope has been in operation since 1995. Until 2003, the image was recorded on the 80-mm film. In 2003, the optical scheme was changed to record images with the 1704×2272 px Sony CyberShot DSC-S85 digital camera.

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