Comparative clustering analysis of Ca II 854.2 nm spectral profiles from simulations and observations

Abstract

We aim to compare and contrast the typical shapes of synthetic Ca II 854.2 nm spectra found in Bifrost simulations having different magnetic activity with the spectral shapes found in a quiet Sun observation from the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST). We use clustering techniques to extract the typical Ca II 854.2 nm profile shapes synthesized from Bifrost simulations with varying amounts of magnetic activity. We degrade the synthetic profiles to observational conditions and repeat the clustering, and we compare our synthetic results with actual observations. While the mean spectra for our high resolution simulations compare reasonably well with the observations, we find that there are considerable differences between the clusters of observed and synthetic intensity profiles, even after the synthetic profiles have been degraded. The typical absorption profiles from the simulations are both narrower and display a steeper transition from the inner wings to the line core. Furthermore, even in our most quiescent simulation we find a far larger fraction of profiles with local emission around the core, or other exotic profile shapes, than in the observations. Looking into the atmospheric structure for a selected set of synthetic clusters, we find distinct differences in the temperature stratification for the clusters most and least similar to the observations. The narrow and steep profiles are associated with either weak gradients in temperature, or temperatures rising to a local maximum in the line wing forming region before sinking to a minimum in the line core forming region. The profiles that display less steep transitions show extended temperature gradients that are steeper in the range -3 τ5000 -1.

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