Abstract

The availability of vector-magnetogram sequences with sufficient accuracy and cadence to estimate the temporal derivative of the magnetic field allows us to use Faraday’s law to find an approximate solution for the electric field in the photosphere, using a Poloidal–Toroidal Decomposition (PTD) of the magnetic field and its partial time derivative. Without additional information, however, the electric field found from this technique is under-determined – Faraday’s law provides no information about the electric field that can be derived from the gradient of a scalar potential. Here, we show how additional information in the form of line-of-sight Doppler-flow measurements, and motions transverse to the line-of-sight determined with ad-hoc methods such as local correlation tracking, can be combined with the PTD solutions to provide much more accurate solutions for the solar electric field, and therefore the Poynting flux of electromagnetic energy in the solar photosphere. Reliable, accurate maps of the Poynting flux are essential for quantitative studies of the buildup of magnetic energy before flares and coronal mass ejections.

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