Abstract

Sunspots, faculae and the magnetic network contribute to solar irradiance variations. The contribution due to faculae and the network is of basic importance, but suers from considerable uncertainty. We determine the contrasts of active region faculae and the network, both as a function of heliocentric angle and magnetogram signal. To achieve this, we analyze near-simultaneous full disk images of photospheric continuum intensity and line- of-sight magnetic eld provided by the Michelson Doppler Interferometer (MDI) on board the SOHO spacecraft. Starting from the surface distribution of the solar magnetic eld we rst construct a mask, which is then used to determine the brightness of magnetic features, and the relatively eld-free part of the photosphere separately. By sorting the magnetogram signal into dierent bins we are able to distinguish between the contrasts of dierent concentrations of magnetic eld. We nd that the center-to-limb variation (CLV) of the contrast changes strongly with magnetogram signal. Thus, the contrasts of active region faculae (large magnetogram signal) and the network (small signal) exhibit a very dierent CLV, showing that the populations of magnetic flux tubes that underly the two kinds of features are dierent. The results are compatible with, on average, larger flux tubes in faculae than in the network. This implies that these elements need to be treated separately when reconstructing variations of the total solar irradiance with high precision. We have obtained an analytical expression for the contrast of photospheric magnetic features as a function of both position on the disk and spatially averaged magnetic eld strength, by performing a 2-dimensional t to the observations. We also provide a linear relationship between magnetogram signal and the =c os(), where is the heliocentric angle, at which the contrast is maximal. Finally, we show that the maximum contrast per unit magnetic flux decreases rapidly with increasing magnetogram signal, supporting earlier evidence that the intrinsic contrast of magnetic flux tubes in the network is higher.

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