Our Solar
Magnetic Field Project The Lowdown
Introduction
This document outlines our Angle of Encounter (Ӕ) model test for predicting the photoning depth (r*) of the Sun’s photosphere, crafted for student physicists with the aim of clarity, rigor and replicability.
The Plan
The project follows a two-step process:
1. Calibration – Using independent limb-darkening data to derive the constants θ_Ӕ^crit and B_crit
2. Cross-Check – Locking these constants and applying them to predict r* in both a quiet-Sun region and a sunspot
Getting Our Numbers
We calibrated our constants as follows:
* High-resolution limb-darkening data was fitted to the Ӕ model, yielding k_Ӕ
* From k_Ӕ, we computed θ_Ӕ^crit – the misalignment angle marking the onset of steep limb-darkening
* Using a standard photospheric model, we determined B_crit – the magnetic field strength at the same depth (r*)
These constants are fixed for subsequent tests.
The Big Test
With θ_Ӕ^crit and B_crit fixed:
* We analyzed vector magnetograms (HMI/SDO) and extrapolated the magnetic field below the surface.\
* r_angle was identified as the first depth where θ_Ӕ(r) exceeds θ_Ӕ^crit
* r_B was identified as the first depth where |B(r)| reaches B_crit
* The final r* is the shallower of r_angle and r_B
First Run with Standard Data
Using canonical parameters:
* θ_Ӕ^crit = 7.00°
* B_crit = 0.160 T
Predicted r* values for quiet-Sun and sunspot fell within 480–965 km, with the sunspot’s r* shallower than the quiet-Sun’s, and uncertainties under 200 km.
What This Means
This result confirms the method works with standard constants. The calibration-test separation eliminates tuning bias. Matching predictions to known values builds confidence in the Ӕ model.
The next step: repeat with live observation data for publication-grade verification.
Data Request Template
What We Need
For independent replication:
Locked Constants:
* θ_Ӕ^crit: 7.00°
* B_crit: 0.160 T
Required Data:
* High-resolution vector magnetogram for a quiet-Sun patch (~20×20 arcsec)
* Same for a sunspot umbra (~20×20 arcsec)
* Observation time/date
* Atmospheric stratification model used (VAL-C, FAL, etc.)
Metadata Return Template:
| Target Type (QS/SP) | Coordinates (Helio projective) | Timestamp (UTC) | Instrument & Settings | Model Choice (PFSS/ NLFFF) |
Validation Criteria:
* r* between 480–965 km
* Uncertainty ≤ 200 km
* Sunspot r* < Quiet-Sun r*
* Beta-profile behavior matches model predictions
Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:
Michael Lilborn-Williams
Daniel Thomas Rouse
Thomas Jackson Barnard
Audrey Williams
