Abstract

We investigate the possibility of measuring magnetic field strength in G-band bright points through the analysis of Zeeman polarization in molecular CH lines. To this end we solve the equations of polarized radiative transfer in the G band through a standard plane-parallel model of the solar atmosphere with an imposed magnetic field and through a more realistic snapshot from a simulation of solar magnetoconvection. This region of the spectrum is crowded with many atomic and molecular lines. Nevertheless, we find several instances of isolated groups of CH lines that are predicted to produce a measurable Stokes V signal in the presence of magnetic fields. In part this is possible because the effective Lande factors of lines in the stronger main branch of the CH A2Δ-X2Π transition tend to zero rather quickly for increasing total angular momentum J, resulting in a Stokes V spectrum of the G band that is less crowded than the corresponding Stokes I spectrum. We indicate that, by contrast, the effective Lande factors of the R and P satellite subbranches of this transition tend to ±1 for increasing J. However, these lines are in general considerably weaker and do not contribute significantly to the polarization signal. In one wavelength location near 430.4 nm, the overlap of several magnetically sensitive and nonsensitive CH lines is predicted to result in a single-lobed Stokes V profile, raising the possibility of high spatial resolution narrowband polarimetric imaging. In the magnetoconvection snapshot we find circular polarization signals of the order of 1%, prompting us to conclude that measuring magnetic field strength in small-scale elements through the Zeeman effect in CH lines is a realistic prospect.

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