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AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
- michaeloconnell
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11 years 5 months ago - 11 years 5 months ago #98260
by michaeloconnell
AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013 was created by michaeloconnell
Close-up of AR1793.
www.astroshot.com/Solar/2013/13-07-20-08..._g3_b3_ap4228-V2.png
Earth shown to scale.
Also note the granules (polygonal shapes) on the photosphere.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granule_(solar_physics)
Michael.
www.astroshot.com/Solar/2013/13-07-20-08..._g3_b3_ap4228-V2.png
Earth shown to scale.
Also note the granules (polygonal shapes) on the photosphere.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granule_(solar_physics)
Michael.
Last edit: 11 years 5 months ago by michaeloconnell.
The following user(s) said Thank You: michael_murphy, lunartic_old, johnomahony, Bruno, martinus, stang
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- mjc
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11 years 5 months ago #98262
by mjc
Replied by mjc on topic Re: AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
Remarkable image Michael.
The Sun's surface is indeed seething (life of granule 8-20 mins as per your wikipedia link).
The granules all appear to have approximately the same diameter.
It is interesting that they do not appear, in general, to be hexagonal.
See www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/outreach/education...vection/RBCells.html
On my brief look-up of this phenomenon I would suggest that the (non-hexagonal) patterns are influenced by the phenomena undernetath the photosphere.
The pillars at the Giants Causeway is an example of the same phenomenon - as far as I know.
Very thought-provoking - thanks for posting.
Mark C.
The Sun's surface is indeed seething (life of granule 8-20 mins as per your wikipedia link).
The granules all appear to have approximately the same diameter.
It is interesting that they do not appear, in general, to be hexagonal.
See www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/outreach/education...vection/RBCells.html
On my brief look-up of this phenomenon I would suggest that the (non-hexagonal) patterns are influenced by the phenomena undernetath the photosphere.
The pillars at the Giants Causeway is an example of the same phenomenon - as far as I know.
Very thought-provoking - thanks for posting.
Mark C.
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- martinus
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11 years 5 months ago #98263
by martinus
Replied by martinus on topic Re: AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
That's awesome. I love the scale comparison.
I've seen the granules in my MK67 with a fairly standard solar filter but never with that kind of contrast. I certainly couldn't make out the shapes.
I've seen the granules in my MK67 with a fairly standard solar filter but never with that kind of contrast. I certainly couldn't make out the shapes.
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- stang
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11 years 5 months ago #98265
by stang
Gareth
Replied by stang on topic Re: AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
That scale is mindblowing!
Gareth
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- michaeloconnell
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11 years 5 months ago - 11 years 5 months ago #98267
by michaeloconnell
As one cell rises, it pushes against a decaying cell adjacent to it and takes over a little bit of that cell's space.
Hence, they are all irregular shaped polygons.
Replied by michaeloconnell on topic Re: AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
I'm thinking that occurs because each one operates independently of the next.mjc wrote: It is interesting that they do not appear, in general, to be hexagonal.
As one cell rises, it pushes against a decaying cell adjacent to it and takes over a little bit of that cell's space.
Hence, they are all irregular shaped polygons.
Last edit: 11 years 5 months ago by michaeloconnell.
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11 years 5 months ago #98271
by dmcdona
Replied by dmcdona on topic Re: AR1793 & Polygonal Cells - 20th July 2013
Did you take that image?
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