Abstract

<p>Intense photospheric magnetic fields manifest as enhanced emission in several spectral lines and parts of the continuum. Here we aim to improve the understanding of the relation between magnetic fields and radiative structures by using the seeing-free observations of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and the Helioseismic Magnetic Imager (HMI), both on-board Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). We use AIA 1600 Å band, which captures the far-ultraviolet continuum emission originating from the temperature minimum of the solar chromosphere.</p><p>We developed a novel, objective method to define thresholds separating the brightest AIA 1600 Å pixels ("bright pixels") and the least bright pixels ("dark pixels") from the AIA 1600 Å brightness distribution. According to the method bright pixels are pixels whose standardized contrast (ratio of brightness to the center-to-limb variation) exceeds the level of I = 1.93. This threshold maximizes the average size of bright clusters (4-connected regions of bright pixels). Dark pixels are pixels whose standardized contrast is below I = 0.5. This corresponds to a threshold below which there are practically no pixels on quiet days. Comparing the AIA 1600 Å intensity and HMI magnetic field observations, we found that the AIA 1600 Å dark pixels correspond to the strongest magnetic field (B > 1325 G) pixels. These pixels are typically within sunspots. On the other hand, we found the AIA bright pixels correspond to moderate (55 G < B < 475 G) magnetic field intensity pixels of HMI.</p><p>We found that the percentage of AIA bright pixels on the solar surface almost entirely explains the observed variability of the total AIA 1600 Å emission, even in the presence of large sunspot groups. We developed a multi-linear regression model, which reliably predicts the magnitude of the disk-averaged unsigned magnetic field using the measured percentages of bright and dark pixels. We found that the large bright clusters have a constant mean unsigned magnetic field, similarly as earlier found for, e.g., Ca II K plages. However, the magnetic field strength of bright clusters is 246.5 ± 0.1 G, which is roughly 100 G larger than found earlier for Ca II K plages.</p>

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