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This volume contains the invited papers presented at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on the Theory of Sunspots, held in Cambridge, England, 22-27 September 1991. The idea of holding this Workshop first arose during the Solar Optical Telescope work shop on Theoretical Problems in High-Resolution Solar Physics in Munich in 1985. At that meeting, separate discussion groups were formed to consider specific topics in solar physics. The discussion group on sunspots recommended that there be a meeting devoted to theoretical problems associated with sunspots, the motivation being the consensus that theory seemed to lag behind the observational evidence in our quest for a satisfactory un derstanding of the physics of sunspots. This recommendation was warmly received and the two of us were designated to organize the Workshop. Although the Workshop eventually took place later than originally envisioned, the de lay turned out to be fortunate and the timing of the Workshop was ideal for a number of reasons. There have been remarkable improvements in high-resolution observations of sunspots in the past few years, and many important new observational results were pre sented for the first time at this Workshop (by groups working at the Lockheed Palo Alto Research Laboratories, the Swedish and German telescopes in the Canary Islands, and the V. S. National Solar Observatory). Vector magnetographs and Stokes polarimetry have at last given us reliable measurements of the vector magnetic fields in sunspots.
Texte du rabat
This volume provides a full account of the many exciting recent advances in both observational and theoretical research on sunspots and is intended to serve as a monograph on the subject. It contains eighteen authoritative review articles on various aspects of the physics of sunspots, each of which is an expanded version of an invited review paper presented at the NATO ARW on the Theory of Sunspots in 1991. Chapters on starspots and on the relation between sunspots and the global-solar-magnetic field and the solar cycle place the subject in a broader astrophysical context. br/ An extensive introductory chapter by the editors presents an overall view of modern research on sunspots from a historical perspective, with a comprehensive list of references, and makes this book suitable for students and nonspecialists, as well as the sophisticated reader. br/
Résumé
` This volume will be an invaluable resource for years to come and I recommend it strongly not only to anyone with an interest in the fascinating subject of sunspots but also to anyone with an interest in the relation between theory and observation in modern astrophysics. '
Geophysics, Astrophysics, Fluid Dynamics, 74, 1994
Contenu
I. Introduction.- The Theory of Sunspots.- II. Setting the Scene.- Starspots.- The Evolution of Sunspots.- III. Overall Structure of Sunspots.- Continuum observations and empirical models of the thermal structure of sunspots.- Observations of the mesoscale magnetic structure of sunspots.- Magnetohydrostatic equilibrium in sunspot models.- The fate of the heat flux blocked by sunspots.- IV. Fine Structure of Sunspots.- Fine structure of umbrae and penumbrae.- High resolution observations of the magnetic and velocity field of simple sunspots.- Magnetoconvection.- The cluster model of sunspots.- V. Waves and Oscillations in Sunspots.- Sunspot oscillations: observations and implications.- Magnetohydrodynamic waves in structured magnetic fields.- Theory of umbral oscillations and penumbral waves.- Sunspot seismology: the interaction of a sunspot with solar p-modes.- VI. The Relation of Sunspots to the Global Solar Magnetic Field.- The formation of flux tubes at the base of the convection zone.- The motion of magnetic flux tubes in the convection zone and the subsurface origin of active regions.- VII. Concluding Summary.- The sunspot phenomenon: a commentary.