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Author name code: shimizu
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:"Shimizu, Toshifumi" 

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Title: Quiet Sun Center to Limb Variation of the Linear Polarization
    Observed by CLASP2 Across the Mg II h and k Lines
Authors: Rachmeler, L. A.; Bueno, J. Trujillo; McKenzie, D. E.;
   Ishikawa, R.; Auchère, F.; Kobayashi, K.; Kano, R.; Okamoto,
   T. J.; Bethge, C. W.; Song, D.; Ballester, E. Alsina; Belluzzi,
   L.; Pino Alemán, T. del; Ramos, A. Asensio; Yoshida, M.; Shimizu,
   T.; Winebarger, A.; Kobelski, A. R.; Vigil, G. D.; Pontieu, B. De;
   Narukage, N.; Kubo, M.; Sakao, T.; Hara, H.; Suematsu, Y.; Štěpán,
   J.; Carlsson, M.; Leenaarts, J.
2022ApJ...936...67R    Altcode: 2022arXiv220701788R
  The CLASP2 (Chromospheric LAyer Spectro-Polarimeter 2) sounding rocket
  mission was launched on 2019 April 11. CLASP2 measured the four Stokes
  parameters of the Mg II h and k spectral region around 2800 Å along a
  200″ slit at three locations on the solar disk, achieving the first
  spatially and spectrally resolved observations of the solar polarization
  in this near-ultraviolet region. The focus of the work presented here
  is the center-to-limb variation of the linear polarization across these
  resonance lines, which is produced by the scattering of anisotropic
  radiation in the solar atmosphere. The linear polarization signals of
  the Mg II h and k lines are sensitive to the magnetic field from the
  low to the upper chromosphere through the Hanle and magneto-optical
  effects. We compare the observations to theoretical predictions
  from radiative transfer calculations in unmagnetized semiempirical
  models, arguing that magnetic fields and horizontal inhomogeneities
  are needed to explain the observed polarization signals and spatial
  variations. This comparison is an important step in both validating and
  refining our understanding of the physical origin of these polarization
  signatures, and also in paving the way toward future space telescopes
  for probing the magnetic fields of the solar upper atmosphere via
  ultraviolet spectropolarimetry.

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Title: GRAVITY faint: reducing noise sources in GRAVITY$^+$ with a
    fast metrology attenuation system
Authors: Widmann, F.; Gillessen, S.; Ott, T.; Shimizu, T.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Fabricius, M.; Woillez, J.; Gonté, F.; Horrobin, M.; Shangguan,
   J.; Yazici, S.; Perrin, G.; Paumard, T.; Brandner, W.; Kreidberg,
   L.; Straubmeier, C.; Perraut, K.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Garcia, P.;
   Hönig, S.; Defrère, D.; Bourdarot, G.; Drescher, A.; Feuchtgruber,
   H.; Genzel, R.; Hartl, M.; Lutz, D.; More, N.; Rau, C.; Uysal, S.;
   Wieprecht, E.
2022arXiv220905593W    Altcode:
  With the upgrade from GRAVITY to GRAVITY$^+$ the instrument will evolve
  into an all-sky interferometer that can observe faint targets, such as
  high redshift AGN. Observing the faintest targets requires reducing the
  noise sources in GRAVITY as much as possible. The dominant noise source,
  especially in the blue part of the spectrum, is the backscattering of
  the metrology laser light onto the detector. To reduce this noise we
  introduce two new metrology modes. With a combination of small hardware
  changes and software adaptations, we can dim the metrology laser during
  the observation without losing the phase referencing. For single beam
  targets, we can even turn off the metrology laser for the maximum SNR
  on the detector. These changes lead to an SNR improvement of over a
  factor of two averaged over the whole spectrum and up to a factor of
  eight in the part of the spectrum currently dominated by laser noise.

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Title: A high angular resolution view of the PAH emission in Seyfert
    galaxies using JWST/MRS data
Authors: García-Bernete, I.; Rigopoulou, D.; Alonso-Herrero,
   A.; Donnan, F. R.; Roche, P. F.; Pereira-Santella, M.; Labiano,
   A.; Peralta de Arriba, L.; Izumi, T.; Ramos Almeida, C.; Shimizu,
   T.; Hönig, S.; García-Burillo, S.; Rosario, D. J.; Ward, M. J.;
   Bellocchi, E.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Fuller, L.; Packham, C.
2022arXiv220811620G    Altcode:
  Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) are carbon-based molecules,
  which are ubiquitous in a variety of astrophysical objects and
  environments. In this work, we use JWST/MIRI MRS spectroscopy of 3
  Seyferts to compare their nuclear PAH emission with that of star-forming
  regions. This study represents the first of its kind using sub-arcsecond
  angular resolution data of local luminous Seyferts (Lbol>10^44.89
  erg/s) on a wide wavelength coverage (4.9-28.1 micron). We present an
  analysis of their nuclear PAH properties by comparing the observed
  ratios with PAH diagnostic model grids, derived from theoretical
  spectra. Our results show that a suite of PAH features is present in
  the innermost parts (~0.45 arcsec at 12 micron; in the inner ~142-245
  pc) of luminous Seyfert galaxies. We find that the nuclear regions
  of AGN lie at different positions of the PAH diagnostic diagrams,
  whereas the SF regions are concentrated around the average values of SF
  galaxies. In particular, we find that the nuclear PAH emission mainly
  originates in neutral PAHs. In contrast, PAH emission originating in
  the SF regions favours ionised PAH grains. The observed PAH ratios
  in the nuclear region of AGN-dominated galaxy NGC 6552 indicate the
  presence of larger-sized PAH molecules compared with those of the SF
  regions. Therefore, our results provide evidence that the AGN have
  a significant impact on the ionization state (and probably the size)
  of the PAH grains on scales of ~142-245 pc.

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Title: Direct Discovery of the Inner Exoplanet in the HD206893 System
Authors: Hinkley, S.; Lacour, S.; Marleau, G. D.; Lagrange, A. M.;
   Wang, J. J.; Kammerer, J.; Cumming, A.; Nowak, M.; Rodet, L.; Stolker,
   T.; Balmer, W. -O.; Ray, S.; Bonnefoy, M.; Mollière, P.; Lazzoni,
   C.; Kennedy, G.; Mordasini, C.; Abuter, R.; Aigrain, S.; Amorim, A.;
   Asensio-Torres, R.; Babusiaux, C.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. -P.; Beust,
   H.; Blunt, S.; Boccaletti, A.; Bohn, A.; Bonnet, H.; Bourdarot, G.;
   Brandner, W.; Cantalloube, F.; Caselli, P.; Charnay, B.; Chauvin,
   G.; Chomez, A.; Choquet, E.; Christiaens, V.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé du
   Foresto, V.; Cridland, A.; Delorme, P.; Dembet, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.;
   Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Feuchtgruber,
   H.; Galland, F.; Garcia, P.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Gardner, T.; Gendron,
   E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Girard, J. H.; Grandjean, A.; Haubois,
   X.; Heißel, G.; Henning, Th.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Houllé,
   M.; Hubert, Z.; Jocou, L.; Keppler, M.; Kervella, P.; Kreidberg, L.;
   Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Maire, A. -L.;
   Mang, F.; Mérand, A.; Meunier, N.; Monnier, J. D.; Mordasini, C.;
   Mouillet, D.; Nasedkin, E.; Ott, T.; Otten, G. P. P. L.; Paladini, C.;
   Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Philipot, F.; Pfuhl, O.; Pourré,
   N.; Pueyo, L.; Rameau, J.; Rickman, E.; Rubini, P.; Rustamkulov, Z.;
   Samland, M.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Sing, D.; Straubmeier, C.;
   Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vigan, A.; Vincent,
   F.; Ward-Duong, K.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez,
   J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.; Zicher, N.; the GRAVITY Collaboration
2022arXiv220804867H    Altcode:
  Long term precise radial velocity (RV) monitoring of HD206893, as well
  as anomalies in the system proper motion, have suggested the presence of
  an additional, inner companion in the system. In this work we describe
  the results of a search for the companion responsible for this RV drift
  and proper motion anomaly. Utilizing information from ongoing precision
  RV measurements with the HARPS spectrograph, as well as Gaia host star
  astrometry, we have undertaken a multi-epoch search for the purported
  additional planet using the VLTI/GRAVITY instrument. We report a high
  significance detection of the purported companion HD206893c over three
  epochs, with clear evidence for Keplerian orbital motion. Our astrometry
  with $\sim$50-100 $\mu$arcsec precision afforded by GRAVITY allows us
  to derive a dynamical mass of 12.3$^{+1.1}_{-1.2}$ M$_{\rm Jup}$ and
  an orbital separation of 3.53$^{+0.80}_{-0.70}$ au for HD206893c. Our
  fits to the orbits of both companions in the system utilize both Gaia
  astrometry and RVs to also provide a precise dynamical estimate of the
  previously uncertain mass of the B component, and therefore derive an
  age of 170 Myr. Importantly, we find that the bolometric luminosity of
  the newly discovered HD206893c is anomalously high, and that standard
  cooling curves are unable to simultaneously account for the brightness
  of both members of the system at a common age of 170 Myr. However, we
  find that incorporating an elevated helium abundance into our cooling
  models in turn results in an enhanced level of deuterium burning in
  the "c" companion, bringing the predicted luminosity in line with our
  measured value. In addition to utilizing long-term RV information,
  this effort is an early example of a direct imaging discovery of a
  bona fide exoplanet that was guided in part with Gaia astrometry.

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Title: Development of Fast and Precise Scan Mirror Mechanism for an
    Airborne Solar Telescope
Authors: Oba, Takayoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo,
   Masahito; Kawabata, Yusuke; Hara, Hirohisa; Uraguchi, Fumihiro;
   Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Tamura, Tomonori; Shinoda, Kazuya; Kodeki,
   Kazuhide; Fukushima, Kazuhiko; Morales Fernández, José Miguel;
   Sánchez Gómez, Antonio; Balaguer Jimenéz, María; Hernández
   Expósito, David; Gandorfer, Achim
2022arXiv220713864O    Altcode:
  We developed a scan mirror mechanism (SMM) that enable a slit-based
  spectrometer or spectropolarimeter to precisely and quickly map
  an astronomical object. The SMM, designed to be installed in the
  optical path preceding the entrance slit, tilts a folding mirror
  and then moves the reflected image laterally on the slit plane,
  thereby feeding a different one-dimensional image to be dispersed by
  the spectroscopic equipment. In general, the SMM is required to scan
  quickly and broadly while precisely placing the slit position across
  the field-of-view (FOV). These performances are highly in demand for
  near-future observations, such as studies on the magnetohydrodynamics of
  the photosphere and the chromosphere. Our SMM implements a closed-loop
  control system by installing electromagnetic actuators and gap-based
  capacitance sensors. Our optical test measurements confirmed that the
  SMM fulfils the following performance criteria: i) supreme scan-step
  uniformity (linearity of 0.08%) across the wide scan range (${\pm}$1005
  arcsec), ii) high stability (3${\sigma}$ = 0.1 arcsec), where the
  angles are expressed in mechanical angle, and iii) fast stepping speed
  (26 ms). The excellent capability of the SMM will be demonstrated
  soon in actual use by installing the mechanism for a near-infrared
  spectropolarimeter onboard the balloon-borne solar observatory for
  the third launch, Sunrise III.

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Title: A spectral solar irradiance monitor (SoSpIM) on the JAXA
    Solar-C (EUVST) space mission
Authors: Harra, Louise K.; Watanabe, Kyoko; Haberreiter, Margit;
   Hori, Tomoaki; Hara, Hirohisa; Kretzschmar, Matthieu; Woods, Thomas;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Krucker, Samuel; Berghmans, David; Jin, Hidekatsu;
   Dominique, Marie; Eparvier, Francis G.; Gissot, Samuel; Leng Yeo, Kok;
   Pfiffner, Dany; Milligan, Ryan; Thiemann, Edward; Miyoshi, Yoshizumi;
   Imada, Shinsuke; Kawate, Tomoko; Chamberlin, Phillip; Rozanov, Eugene;
   Silvio Koller, -.; Barczynski, Krzysztof; Nozomu; Nishitani; Ieda,
   Akimasa; Langer, Patrick; Meier, Leandro; Tye, Daniel; Alberti, Andrea
2022cosp...44..834H    Altcode:
  The JAXA Solar-C (EUVST) mission (Shimizu et al., 2020) is designed
  to comprehensively understand how mass and energy are transferred
  throughout the solar atmosphere. The EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic
  Telescope (EUVST) onboard does this by observing all the temperature
  regimes of the atmosphere from the chromosphere to the corona
  simultaneously. To enhance the EUVST scientific capabilities,
  there will be a Solar Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SoSpIM). SoSpIM
  will work hand-in-hand scientifically with EUVST, by providing the
  full Sun irradiance at sub-second time cadence combined with the
  spatially resolved spectroscopy from EUVST. The SoSPIM instrument
  will specifically address two aspects. These are: · Understand how
  the solar atmosphere becomes unstable, releasing the energy that
  drives solar flares - achieved through probing fast time cadence
  solar flare variations. · Measuring solar irradiance that impacts
  the Earth's thermosphere and the mesosphere, linking to spatially
  resolved measurements of the solar atmosphere with EUVST. SoSpIM will
  provide high time resolution measurements in 2 channels (a) in the
  corona through channel 1 (EUV) and (b) in the lower atmosphere through
  channel 2 (Lyman alpha). Each channel impacts different layers of the
  Earth's atmosphere.

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Title: How Can Solar-C/SOSPIM Contribute to the Understanding of
    Quasi-Periodic Pulsations in Solar Flares?
Authors: Dominique, Marie; Harra, Louise K.; Watanabe, Kyoko; Hara,
   Hirohisa; Zhukov, Andrei; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Berghmans, David;
   Dolla, Laurent; Gissot, Samuel; Pfiffner, Dany; Imada, Shinsuke;
   Silvio Koller, -.; Meier, Leandro; Tye, Daniel; Alberti, Andrea
2022cosp...44.2524D    Altcode:
  Quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) refer to nearly-periodic oscillations
  that are often observed in irradiance time series during solar flares
  and have also been reported in several stellar flares. In the last
  years, several statistical studies based on Soft X-ray measurements
  have reached the conclusion that QPPs are present in most solar
  flares of class M and above. Still, as of today, we are still unsure
  of what causes QPPs. Several models could explain the presence of
  QPPs with periods matching the ones observed. More detailed analysis
  of the observational signatures of QPPs might help determine which
  of those models are actually playing a role in the generation of
  QPPs. However, as QPPs is a small timescale process (the period of
  QPPs is often reported to be less than a minute), such an analysis
  requires instruments with a good signal-to-noise and high sampling
  rate. In this context, the spectral solar irradiance monitor SOSPIM,
  that will be part of the JAXA SOLAR C mission and that will complement
  the EUVST spectrograph measurements, could be a valuable asset. SOSPIM
  will observe the solar chromosphere and corona in the Lyman-alpha
  and EUV spectral ranges at high cadence. In this presentation, we
  review the current knowledge of QPPs and describe what could be the
  contribution of SOSPIM to push their understanding one step forward.

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Title: Space-based instruments for small scale dynamics in the solar
    upper atmosphere
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2022cosp...44.2523S    Altcode:
  Physical mechanisms on elemental small scales are believed
  to be a key for understanding the formation mechanisms of the
  hot and dynamic outer solar atmosphere and mechanisms of solar
  eruptions. High resolution focus of space-based instruments will
  be rich scientifically. Discoveries may be found on the elemental
  small scales, such as the nature of magnetic stresses resulting
  from braiding of magnetic field lines; the magnetic topology at the
  footpoints of spicules, jets, and prominences; the transport of energy
  via Alfvén waves; and the development and effects of turbulence
  in all levels of the solar atmosphere. In the early 2020s, large
  aperture telescopes, such as DKIST, have started their observations,
  providing new diagnostics of magnetic and velocity fields in the
  lower atmosphere with super high spatial resolution. In space, Parker
  Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter, and BepiColomb are flying to explore the
  inner heliosphere. New instruments are needed to link high resolution
  information in the low atmosphere with observations from the inner
  heliosphere. This means high resolution instruments for diagnosing the
  upper atmosphere from the upper chromosphere to the corona and linking
  to the inner heliosphere. Ideal state-of-art instruments for this
  purpose will be realized in the latter half of 2020s: Solar-C (EUVST)
  and MUSE. The combination of these two spacecraft with ground-based
  DKIST would be the most powerful for dynamics in small-scales.

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Title: An ALMA Observation of Time Variations in Chromospheric
    Temperature of a Solar Plage Region
Authors: Abe, Masashi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shimojo, Masumi
2022FrASS...9.8249A    Altcode:
  Nanoflares and the shock formation of magnetohydrodynamic waves in the
  solar chromosphere have been considered as key physical mechanisms
  of the heating of the chromosphere and corona. To investigate
  candidates of their signature in the mm-wavelength, a tiny active
  region located on the solar disk was observed with the Atacama Large
  millimeter and sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) at 3 mm, coordinated with
  observatories on orbit including Hinode SOT spectro-polarimeter in
  the Cycle 4 solar campaign (19 March 2017). ALMA's spatial resolution
  was moderate, far from the best performance, but it provided stable
  conditions that are suitable to investigate temporal variations in the
  mm-wavelength. We determined that the noise level is less than 20 K
  (σ) over 1 hour in the 20-s cadence time series of synthesized ALMA
  images. The time variations with amplitudes above the noise level
  were observed throughout the field of view, but variations exceeding
  200 K, corresponding to energy input to the chromosphere on the order
  of 1020-22 erg, were localized in two locations. One location was on
  the polarity inversion line, where tiny concentrated magnetic patches
  exist in weak field and a tiny magnetic flux may be emergent. The
  other location was at the outer edge of a bipolar magnetic region,
  which was under development with a successive series of magnetic flux
  emergence. This observation suggests that nanoflare-class energy inputs
  in the chromosphere can occur associated with emerging flux activities.

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Title: First Light for GRAVITY Wide: Large Separation Fringe Tracking
    for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
Authors: GRAVITY+ Collaboration; :; Abuter, R.; Allouche, F.; Amorim,
   A.; Bailet, C.; Bauböck, M.; Berger, J. -P.; Berio, P.; Bigioli,
   A.; Boebion, O.; Bolzer, M. L.; Bonnet, H.; Bourdarot, G.; Bourget,
   P.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; Courtney-Barrer, B.; Dallilar, Y.;
   Davies, R.; Defrère, D.; Delboulbé, A.; Delplancke, F.; Dembet, R.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Drescher, A.; Eckart, A.; Édouard, C.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Fabricius, M.; Feuchtgruber, H.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber,
   N. M.; Garcia, E.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gil,
   J. P.; Gillessen, S.; Gomes, T.; Gonté, F.; Gouvret, C.; Guajardo, P.;
   Guieu, S.; Hartl, M.; Haubois, X.; Haußmann, F.; Heißel, G.; Henning,
   Th.; Hippler, S.; Hönig, S.; Horrobin, M.; Hubin, N.; Jacqmart,
   E.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.; Kervella, P.; Korhonen,
   H.; Kreidberg, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagarde, S.; Lai, O.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laugier, R.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Leftley, J.; Léna, P.; Lutz,
   D.; Mang, F.; Marcotto, A.; Maurel, D.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.;
   More, N.; Nowacki, H.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.;
   Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Petrov, R.; Pfuhl, O.; Pourré,
   N.; Rabien, S.; Rau, C.; Robbe-Dubois, S.; Rochat, S.; Salman, M.;
   Schöller, M.; Schubert, J.; Schuhler, N.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu,
   T.; Scheithauer, S.; Sevin, A.; Soulez, F.; Spang, A.; Stadler, E.;
   Stadler, J.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram,
   K. R. W.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.; Uysal, S.; Widmann, F.;
   Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.;
   Zins, G.
2022arXiv220600684G    Altcode:
  GRAVITY+ is the upgrade of GRAVITY and the Very Large Telescope
  Interferometer (VLTI) with wide-separation fringe tracking, new
  adaptive optics, and laser guide stars on all four 8~m Unit Telescopes
  (UTs), for ever fainter, all-sky, high contrast, milliarcsecond
  interferometry. Here we present the design and first results of the
  first phase of GRAVITY+, called GRAVITY Wide. GRAVITY Wide combines
  the dual-beam capabilities of the VLTI and the GRAVITY instrument to
  increase the maximum separation between the science target and the
  reference star from 2 arcseconds with the 8 m UTs up to several 10
  arcseconds, limited only by the Earth's turbulent atmosphere. This
  increases the sky-coverage of GRAVITY by two orders of magnitude,
  opening up milliarcsecond resolution observations of faint objects, and
  in particular the extragalactic sky. The first observations in 2019 -
  2022 include first infrared interferometry of two redshift $z\sim2$
  quasars, interferometric imaging on the binary system HD 105913A, and
  repeated observations of multiple star systems in the Orion Trapezium
  Cluster. We find the coherence loss between the science object and
  fringe-tracking reference star well described by the turbulence
  of the Earth's atmosphere. We confirm that the larger apertures of
  the UTs result in higher visibilities for a given separation due to
  larger overlap of the projected pupils on sky and give predictions
  for visibility loss as a function of separation to be used for future
  planning.

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Title: CASPER: A mission to study the time-dependent evolution of
    the magnetic solar chromosphere and transition regions
Authors: Orozco Suárez, D.; del Toro Iniesta, J. C.; Bailén, F. J.;
   López Jiménez, A.; Balaguez Jiménez, M.; Bellot Rubio, L. R.;
   Ishikawa, R.; Katsukawa, Y.; Kano, R.; Shimizu, T.; Trujillo Bueno,
   J.; Asensio Ramos, A.; del Pino Alemán, T.
2022ExA...tmp...26O    Altcode:
  Our knowledge about the solar chromosphere and transition region (TR)
  has increased in the last decade thanks to the huge scientific return
  of space-borne observatories like SDO, IRIS, and Hinode, and suborbital
  rocket experiments like CLASP1, CLASP2, and Hi-C. However, the magnetic
  nature of those solar regions remain barely explored. The chromosphere
  and TR of the Sun harbor weak fields and are in a low ionization stage
  both having critical effects on their thermodynamic behavior. Relatively
  cold gas structures, such as spicules and prominences, are located in
  these two regions and display a dynamic evolution in high-resolution
  observations that static and instantaneous 3D-magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
  models are not able to reproduce. The role of the chromosphere and TR
  as the necessary path to a (largely unexplained) very hot corona calls
  for the generation of observationally based, time-dependent models
  of these two layers that include essential, up to now disregarded,
  ingredients in the modeling such as the vector magnetic field. We
  believe that the community is convinced that the origin of both the
  heat and kinetic energy observed in the upper layers of the solar
  atmosphere is of magnetic origin, but reliable magnetic field
  measurements are missing. The access to sensitive polarimetric
  measurements in the ultraviolet wavelengths has been elusive until
  recently due to limitations in the available technology. We propose a
  low-risk and high-Technology Readiness Level (TRL) mission to explore
  the magnetism and dynamics of the solar chromosphere and TR. The mission
  baseline is a low-Earth, Sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude between
  600 and 800 km. The proposed scientific payload consists of a 30 cm
  aperture telescope with a spectropolarimeter covering the hydrogen
  Ly-alpha and the Mg II h&k ultraviolet lines. The instrument shall
  record high-cadence, full spectropolarimetric observations of the
  solar upper atmosphere. Besides the answers to a fundamental solar
  problem the mission has a broader scientific return. For example,
  the time-dependent modeling of the chromospheres of stars harboring
  exoplanets is fundamental for estimating the planetary radiation
  environment. The mission is based on technologies that are mature
  enough for space and will provide scientific measurements that are
  not available by other means.

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Title: Kiloparsec view of a typical star-forming galaxy when the
    Universe was $\sim$1 Gyr old II. Regular rotating disk and evidence
    for baryon dominance on galactic scales
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Price, S. H.;
   Übler, H.; Bolatto, A. D.; Davies, R. L.; Fisher, D.; Genzel, R.;
   Lutz, D.; Naab, T.; Nestor, A.; Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Tacconi,
   L.; Tadaki, K.
2022arXiv220300689H    Altcode:
  We present a kinematic analysis of the main-sequence galaxy HZ4 at
  $z=5.5$. Our study is based on deep, spatially resolved observations
  of the [CII] 158 $\mu$m transition obtained with the Atacama Large
  Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA). From the combined analysis
  of the disk morphology, the two-dimensional velocity structure,
  and forward-modeling of the one-dimensional velocity and velocity
  dispersion profiles, we conclude that HZ4 has a regular rotating
  disk in place. The intrinsic velocity dispersion in HZ4 is high
  ($\sigma_{0}=65.8^{+2.9}_{-3.3}$ km s$^{-1}$), and the ratio between
  the rotational velocity and the intrinsic velocity dispersion is $V_{\rm
  rot}/\sigma_{0}=2.2$. These values are consistent with the expectations
  from the trends of increasing $\sigma_{0}$ and decreasing $V_{\rm
  rot}/\sigma_{0}$ as a function of redshift observed in main-sequence
  galaxies up to $z\approx4$. Galaxy evolution models suggest that the
  high level of turbulence observed in HZ4 can only be achieved if, in
  addition to stellar feedback, there is radial transport of gas within
  the disk. Finally, we find that HZ4 is baryon dominated on galactic
  scales ($\lesssim2\times R_{\rm e}$), with a dark matter fraction at one
  effective radius of $f_{\rm DM}(R_{\rm e})=0.41^{+0.25}_{-0.22}$. This
  value is comparable to the dark matter fractions found in lower
  redshift galaxies that could be the descendants of HZ4: massive
  ($M_{\star}\approx10^{11}~M_{\odot}$), star-forming galaxies at
  $z\sim2$, and passive, early type galaxies at $z\approx0$.

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Title: Deep images of the Galactic center with GRAVITY
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Aimar, N.; Amorim, A.;
   Arras, P.; Bauböck, M.; Berger, J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.;
   Bourdarot, G.; Cardoso, V.; Clénet, Y.; Davies, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.;
   Dexter, J.; Dallilar, Y.; Drescher, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Enßlin, T.;
   Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel,
   R.; Gillessen, S.; Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.; Henning, T.;
   Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jochum, L.; Jocou,
   L.; Kaufer, A.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin,
   J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Mang, F.; Nowak, M.; Ott, T.; Paumard,
   T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rabien, S.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.; Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier,
   C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vincent, F.; von
   Fellenberg, S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek,
   E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.; Zins, G.
2022A&A...657A..82G    Altcode: 2021arXiv211207477G
  Stellar orbits at the Galactic Center provide a very clean probe of
  the gravitational potential of the supermassive black hole. They can be
  studied with unique precision, beyond the confusion limit of a single
  telescope, with the near-infrared interferometer GRAVITY. Imaging is
  essential to search the field for faint, unknown stars on short orbits
  which potentially could constrain the black hole spin. Furthermore,
  it provides the starting point for astrometric fitting to derive
  highly accurate stellar positions. Here, we present G<SUP>R</SUP>, a
  new imaging tool specifically designed for Galactic Center observations
  with GRAVITY. The algorithm is based on a Bayesian interpretation of the
  imaging problem, formulated in the framework of information field theory
  and building upon existing works in radio-interferometric imaging. Its
  application to GRAVITY observations from 2021 yields the deepest images
  to date of the Galactic Center on scales of a few milliarcseconds. The
  images reveal the complicated source structure within the central
  100 mas around Sgr A*, where we detected the stars S29 and S55 and
  confirm S62 on its trajectory, slowly approaching Sgr A*. Furthermore,
  we were able to detect S38, S42, S60, and S63 in a series of exposures
  for which we offset the fiber from Sgr A*. We provide an update on the
  orbits of all aforementioned stars. In addition to these known sources,
  the images also reveal a faint star moving to the west at a high angular
  velocity. We cannot find any coincidence with any known source and,
  thus, we refer to the new star as S300. From the flux ratio with S29,
  we estimate its K-band magnitude as m<SUB>K</SUB>(S300) ≃ 19.0 −
  19.3. Images obtained with CLEAN confirm the detection. To assess
  the sensitivity of our images, we note that fiber damping reduces
  the apparent magnitude of S300 and the effect increases throughout
  the year as the star moves away from the field center. Furthermore,
  we performed a series of source injection tests. Under favorable
  circumstances, sources well below a magnitude of 20 can be recovered,
  while 19.7 is considered the more universal limit for a good data set.

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Title: Mass distribution in the Galactic Center based on
    interferometric astrometry of multiple stellar orbits
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Aimar, N.; Amorim, A.;
   Ball, J.; Bauböck, M.; Berger, J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Bourdarot, G.;
   Brandner, W.; Cardoso, V.; Clénet, Y.; Dallilar, Y.; Davies, R.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Drescher, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster
   Schreiber, N. M.; Foschi, A.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel,
   R.; Gillessen, S.; Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.; Henning,
   T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.;
   Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna,
   P.; Lutz, D.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl,
   O.; Rabien, S.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.; Stadler,
   J.; Stephens, A. W.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi,
   L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.
2022A&A...657L..12G    Altcode:
  Stars orbiting the compact radio source Sgr A* in the Galactic Center
  serve as precision probes of the gravitational field around the closest
  massive black hole. In addition to adaptive optics-assisted astrometry
  (with NACO/VLT) and spectroscopy (with SINFONI/VLT, NIRC2/Keck and
  GNIRS/Gemini) over three decades, we have obtained 30-100 μas
  astrometry since 2017 with the four-telescope interferometric
  beam combiner GRAVITY/VLTI, capable of reaching a sensitivity of
  m<SUB>K</SUB> = 20 when combining data from one night. We present
  the simultaneous detection of several stars within the diffraction
  limit of a single telescope, illustrating the power of interferometry
  in the field. The new data for the stars S2, S29, S38, and S55 yield
  significant accelerations between March and July 2021, as these stars
  pass the pericenters of their orbits between 2018 and 2023. This allows
  for a high-precision determination of the gravitational potential around
  Sgr A*. Our data are in excellent agreement with general relativity
  orbits around a single central point mass, M<SUB>•</SUB> = 4.30 ×
  10<SUP>6</SUP> M<SUB>⊙</SUB>, with a precision of about ±0.25%. We
  improve the significance of our detection of the Schwarzschild
  precession in the S2 orbit to 7σ. Assuming plausible density profiles,
  the extended mass component inside the S2 apocenter (≈0.23″ or 2.4
  × 10<SUP>4</SUP> R<SUB>S</SUB>) must be ≲3000 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> (1σ),
  or ≲0.1% of M<SUB>•</SUB>. Adding the enclosed mass determinations
  from 13 stars orbiting Sgr A* at larger radii, the innermost radius
  at which the excess mass beyond Sgr A* is tentatively seen is r ≈
  2.5″ ≥ 10× the apocenter of S2. This is in full harmony with
  the stellar mass distribution (including stellar-mass black holes)
  obtained from the spatially resolved luminosity function.

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Title: Simultaneous ALMA-Hinode-IRIS Observations on Footpoint
    Signatures of a Soft X-Ray Loop-like Microflare
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shimojo, Masumi; Abe, Masashi
2021ApJ...922..113S    Altcode: 2021arXiv210911215S
  Microflares have been considered to be among the major energy
  input sources to form active solar corona. To investigate the
  response of the low atmosphere to events, we conducted an Atacama
  Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observation at 3 mm,
  coordinated with Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) and
  Hinode observations, on 2017 March 19. During the observations, a soft
  X-ray loop-type microflare (active region transient brightening) was
  captured using the Hinode X-ray telescope in high temporal cadence. A
  brightening loop footpoint is located within narrow fields of view of
  ALMA, IRIS slit-jaw imager, and Hinode spectropolarimeter. Counterparts
  of the microflare at the footpoint were detected in Si IV and ALMA
  images, while the counterparts were less apparent in C II and Mg II
  k images. Their impulsive time profiles exhibit the Neupert effect
  pertaining to soft X-ray intensity evolution. The magnitude of thermal
  energy measured using ALMA was approximately 100 times smaller than
  that measured in the corona. These results suggest that impulsive
  counterparts can be detected in the transition region and upper
  chromosphere, where the plasma is thermally heated via impinging
  nonthermal particles. Our energy evaluation indicates a deficit of
  accelerated particles that impinge the footpoints for a small class
  of soft X-ray microflares. The footpoint counterparts consist of
  several brightening kernels, all of which are located in weak (void)
  magnetic areas formed in patchy distribution of strong magnetic flux
  at the photospheric level. The kernels provide a conceptual image in
  which the transient energy release occurs at multiple locations on
  the sheaths of magnetic flux bundles in the corona.

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Title: The mass distribution in the Galactic Centre from
    interferometric astrometry of multiple stellar orbits
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Aimar, N.; Amorim, A.;
   Ball, J.; Bauböck, M.; Berger, J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Bourdarot, G.;
   Brandner, W.; Cardoso, V.; Clénet, Y.; Dallilar, Y.; Davies, R.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Drescher, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster
   Schreiber, N. M.; Foschi, A.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel,
   R.; Gillessen, S.; Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.; Henning,
   T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.;
   Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna,
   P.; Lutz, D.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl,
   O.; Rabien, S.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.; Stadler,
   J.; Stephens, A. W.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi,
   L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Young,
   A.; Zins, G.
2021arXiv211207478G    Altcode:
  The stars orbiting the compact radio source Sgr A* in the Galactic
  Centre are precision probes of the gravitational field around the
  closest massive black hole. In addition to adaptive optics assisted
  astrometry (with NACO / VLT) and spectroscopy (with SINFONI / VLT,
  NIRC2 / Keck and GNIRS / Gemini) over three decades, since 2016/2017
  we have obtained 30-100 mu-as astrometry with the four-telescope
  interferometric beam combiner GRAVITY / VLTI reaching a sensitivity of
  mK = 20 when combining data from one night. We present the simultaneous
  detection of several stars within the diffraction limit of a single
  telescope, illustrating the power of interferometry. The new data
  for the stars S2, S29, S38 and S55 yield significant accelerations
  between March and July 2021, as these stars pass the pericenters of
  their orbits between 2018 and 2023. This allows for a high-precision
  determination of the gravitational potential around Sgr A*. Our data
  are in excellent agreement with general relativity orbits around a
  single central point mass, M = 4.30 x 10^6 M_sun with a precision
  of about +-0.25%. We improve the significance of our detection of
  the Schwarzschild precession in the S2 orbit to 7 sigma. Assuming
  plausible density profiles, an extended mass component inside S2's
  apocentre (= 0.23" or 2.4 x 10^4 R_S) must be 3000 M_sun (1 sigma),
  or 0.1% of M. Adding the enclosed mass determinations from 13 stars
  orbiting Sgr A* at larger radii, the innermost radius at which the
  excess mass beyond Sgr A* tentatively is seen is r = 2.5" &gt;= 10x
  the apocentre of S2. This is in full harmony with the stellar mass
  distribution (including stellar-mass black holes) obtained from the
  spatially resolved luminosity function.

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Title: How Can Solar-C/SOSPIM Contribute to the Understanding of
    Quasi-Periodic Pulsations in Solar Flares?
Authors: Dominique, Marie; Dolla, Laurent; Zhukov, Andrei; Alberti,
   Andrea; Berghmans, David; Gissot, Samuel; Hara, Hirohisa; Harra,
   Louise; Imada, Shinsuke; Koller, Silvio; Meier, Leandro; Pfiffner,
   Daniel; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tye, Daniel; Watanabe, Kyoko
2021AGUFMSH25E2124D    Altcode:
  Quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) refer to nearly-periodic oscillations
  that are often observed in irradiance time series during solar flares
  and have also been reported in several stellar flares. In the last
  years, several statistical studies based on Soft X-ray measurements
  have reached the conclusion that QPPs are present in most solar flares
  of class M and above. Still, the mechanism at the origin of QPPs is
  under debate. Are they caused by waves or periodic fluctuations of the
  magnetic reconnection driving the flare? Analyzing the characteristics
  of QPPs and their evolution during the flare could help identifying
  their origin. However, QPPs sometimes exhibit very different
  periodicities, and do not always happen during the same phase of the
  flare. All this could point to the coexistence of QPPs with different
  origin mechanism, and indicates the need for more observations. In this
  context, the spectral solar irradiance monitor SOSPIM, that will be
  part of the JAXA SOLAR C mission and that will complement the EUVST
  spectrograph measurements, could be a valuable asset. SOSPIM will
  observe the solar chromosphere and corona in the Lyman-alpha and EUV
  spectral ranges at high cadence. In this presentation, we review the
  current knowledge of QPPs and describe what could be the contribution
  of SOSPIM to push their understanding one step forward.

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Title: Rotation Curves in z   1-2 Star-forming Disks: Comparison
    of Dark Matter Fractions and Disk Properties for Different Fitting
    Methods
Authors: Price, S. H.; Shimizu, T. T.; Genzel, R.; Übler, H.;
   Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Tacconi, L. J.; Davies, R. I.; Coogan,
   R. T.; Lutz, D.; Wuyts, S.; Wisnioski, E.; Nestor, A.; Sternberg, A.;
   Burkert, A.; Bender, R.; Contursi, A.; Davies, R. L.; Herrera-Camus,
   R.; Lee, M. -J.; Naab, T.; Neri, R.; Renzini, A.; Saglia, R.; Schruba,
   A.; Schuster, K.
2021ApJ...922..143P    Altcode: 2021arXiv210902659P
  We present a follow-up analysis examining the dynamics and structures
  of 41 massive, large star-forming galaxies at z ~ 0.67 - 2.45 using
  both ionized and molecular gas kinematics. We fit the galaxy dynamics
  with models consisting of a bulge, a thick, turbulent disk, and an NFW
  dark matter halo, using code that fully forward-models the kinematics,
  including all observational and instrumental effects. We explore
  the parameter space using Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling,
  including priors based on stellar and gas masses and disk sizes. We
  fit the full sample using extracted 1D kinematic profiles. For a subset
  of 14 well-resolved galaxies, we also fit the 2D kinematics. The MCMC
  approach robustly confirms the results from least-squares fitting
  presented in Paper I: the sample galaxies tend to be baryon-rich on
  galactic scales (within one effective radius). The 1D and 2D MCMC
  results are also in good agreement for the subset, demonstrating
  that much of the galaxy dynamical information is captured along the
  major axis. The 2D kinematics are more affected by the presence of
  noncircular motions, which we illustrate by constructing a toy model
  with constant inflow for one galaxy that exhibits residual signatures
  consistent with radial motions. This analysis, together with results
  from Paper I and other studies, strengthens the finding that massive,
  star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1 - 2 are baryon-dominated on galactic
  scales, with lower dark matter fractions toward higher baryonic surface
  densities. Finally, we present details of the kinematic fitting code
  used in this analysis.

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Title: PSTEP: project for solar-terrestrial environment prediction
Authors: Kusano, Kanya; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Ishii, Mamoru; Miyoshi,
   Yoshizumi; Yoden, Shigeo; Akiyoshi, Hideharu; Asai, Ayumi; Ebihara,
   Yusuke; Fujiwara, Hitoshi; Goto, Tada-Nori; Hanaoka, Yoichiro;
   Hayakawa, Hisashi; Hosokawa, Keisuke; Hotta, Hideyuki; Hozumi,
   Kornyanat; Imada, Shinsuke; Iwai, Kazumasa; Iyemori, Toshihiko; Jin,
   Hidekatsu; Kataoka, Ryuho; Katoh, Yuto; Kikuchi, Takashi; Kubo, Yûki;
   Kurita, Satoshi; Matsumoto, Haruhisa; Mitani, Takefumi; Miyahara,
   Hiroko; Miyoshi, Yasunobu; Nagatsuma, Tsutomu; Nakamizo, Aoi; Nakamura,
   Satoko; Nakata, Hiroyuki; Nishizuka, Naoto; Otsuka, Yuichi; Saito,
   Shinji; Saito, Susumu; Sakurai, Takashi; Sato, Tatsuhiko; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Shinagawa, Hiroyuki; Shiokawa, Kazuo; Shiota, Daikou;
   Takashima, Takeshi; Tao, Chihiro; Toriumi, Shin; Ueno, Satoru;
   Watanabe, Kyoko; Watari, Shinichi; Yashiro, Seiji; Yoshida, Kohei;
   Yoshikawa, Akimasa
2021EP&S...73..159K    Altcode:
  Although solar activity may significantly impact the global environment
  and socioeconomic systems, the mechanisms for solar eruptions and
  the subsequent processes have not yet been fully understood. Thus,
  modern society supported by advanced information systems is at risk
  from severe space weather disturbances. Project for solar-terrestrial
  environment prediction (PSTEP) was launched to improve this situation
  through synergy between basic science research and operational
  forecast. The PSTEP is a nationwide research collaboration in Japan
  and was conducted from April 2015 to March 2020, supported by a
  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas from the
  Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of
  Japan. By this project, we sought to answer the fundamental questions
  concerning the solar-terrestrial environment and aimed to build a
  next-generation space weather forecast system to prepare for severe
  space weather disasters. The PSTEP consists of four research groups and
  proposal-based research units. It has made a significant progress in
  space weather research and operational forecasts, publishing over 500
  refereed journal papers and organizing four international symposiums,
  various workshops and seminars, and summer school for graduate students
  at Rikubetsu in 2017. This paper is a summary report of the PSTEP and
  describes the major research achievements it produced.

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Title: The GRAVITY young stellar object survey. VII. The inner dusty
    disks of T Tauri stars
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Perraut, K.; Labadie, L.; Bouvier, J.;
   Ménard, F.; Klarmann, L.; Dougados, C.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. -P.;
   Bouarour, Y. -I.; Brandner, W.; Caratti O Garatti, A.; Caselli, P.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Garcia-Lopez, R.; Henning, T.; Sanchez-Bermudez,
   J.; Sousa, A.; van Dishoeck, E.; Alécian, E.; Amorim, A.; Clénet,
   Y.; Davies, R.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Förster-Schreiber, N. M.; Garcia, P.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.;
   Gillessen, S.; Grellmann, R.; Heißel, G.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin,
   M.; Hubert, Z.; Jocou, L.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.;
   Perrin, G.; Scheithauer, S.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler,
   J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L.; Vincent,
   F.; von Fellenberg, S.; Widmann, F.
2021A&A...655A..73G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210911826T
  Context. T Tauri stars are surrounded by dust and gas disks. As
  material reservoirs from which matter is accreted onto the central
  star and planets are built, these protoplanetary disks play a central
  role in star and planet formation. <BR /> Aims: We aim at spatially
  resolving at sub-astronomical unit (sub-au) scales the innermost
  regions of the protoplanetary disks around a sample of T Tauri stars
  to better understand their morphology and composition. <BR /> Methods:
  Thanks to the sensitivity and the better spatial frequency coverage
  of the GRAVITY instrument of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer,
  we extended our homogeneous data set of 27 Herbig stars and collected
  near-infrared K-band interferometric observations of 17 T Tauri stars,
  spanning effective temperatures and luminosities in the ranges of
  ~4000-6000 K and ~0.4-10 L<SUB>⊙</SUB>, respectively. We focus on the
  continuum emission and develop semi-physical geometrical models to fit
  the interferometric data and search for trends between the properties
  of the disk and the central star. <BR /> Results: As for those of their
  more massive counterparts, the Herbig Ae/Be stars, the best-fit models
  of the inner rim of the T Tauri disks correspond to wide rings. The
  GRAVITY measurements extend the radius-luminosity relation toward the
  smallest luminosities (0.4-10 L<SUB>⊙</SUB>). As observed previously,
  in this range of luminosities, the R ∝ L<SUP>1∕2</SUP> trend
  line is no longer valid, and the K-band sizes measured with GRAVITY
  appear to be larger than the predicted sizes derived from sublimation
  radius computation. We do not see a clear correlation between the
  K-band half-flux radius and the mass accretion rate onto the central
  star. Besides, having magnetic truncation radii in agreement with the
  K-band GRAVITY sizes would require magnetic fields as strong as a few
  kG, which should have been detected, suggesting that accretion is not
  the main process governing the location of the half-flux radius of
  the inner dusty disk. The GRAVITY measurements agree with models that
  take into account the scattered light, which could be as important as
  thermal emission in the K band for these cool stars. The N-to-K band
  size ratio may be a proxy for disentangling disks with silicate features
  in emission from disks with weak and/or in absorption silicate features
  (i.e., disks with depleted inner regions and/or with large gaps). The
  GRAVITY data also provide inclinations and position angles of the inner
  disks. When compared to those of the outer disks derived from ALMA
  images of nine objects of our sample, we detect clear misalignments
  between both disks for four objects. <BR /> Conclusions: The combination
  of improved data quality with a significant and homogeneous sample
  of young stellar objects allows us to revisit the pioneering works
  done on the protoplanetary disks by K-band interferometry and to test
  inner disk physics such as the inner rim morphology and location. <P
  />GTO programs with run IDs: 0103.C-0347, 0102.C-0408, 0101.C-0311,
  0100.C-0278, and 099.C-0667.

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Title: The GRAVITY young stellar object survey. VIII. Gas and dust
    faint inner rings in the hybrid disk of HD141569
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Ganci, V.; Labadie, L.; Klarmann,
   L.; de Valon, A.; Perraut, K.; Benisty, M.; Brandner, W.; Caratti O
   Garatti, A.; Dougados, C.; Eupen, F.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Grellmann, R.;
   Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Wojtczak, A.; Garcia, P.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck,
   M.; Berger, J. -P.; Caselli, P.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Filho, M.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.;
   Heissel, G.; Henning, T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Hubert, Z.;
   Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jocou, L.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perrin, G.;
   Pfuhl, O.; Heißel, G.; Rousset, G.; Scheithauer, S.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T.; Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.;
   van Dishoeck, E.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.; Widmann, F.;
   Woillez, J.
2021A&A...655A.112G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210910070G
  Context. The formation and evolution of planetary systems impact
  the evolution of the primordial accretion disk in its dust and gas
  content. HD 141569 is a peculiar object in this context as it is
  the only known pre-main sequence star characterized by a hybrid
  disk. Observations with 8 m class telescopes probed the outer-disk
  structure showing a complex system of multiple rings and outer
  spirals. Furthermore, interferometric observations attempted to
  characterize its inner 5 au region, but derived limited constraints. <BR
  /> Aims: The goal of this work was to explore with new high-resolution
  interferometric observations the geometry, properties, and dynamics of
  the dust and gas in the internal regions of HD 141569. <BR /> Methods:
  We observed HD 141569 on milliarcsecond scales with GRAVITY/VLTI in
  the near-infrared (IR) at low (R ~ 20) and high (R ~ 4000) spectral
  resolution. We interpreted the interferometric visibilities and
  spectral energy distribution with geometrical models and through
  radiative transfer techniques using the code MCMax to constrain the
  dust emission. We analyzed the high spectral resolution quantities
  (visibilities and differential phases) to investigate the properties of
  the Brackett-γ (Brγ) line emitting region. <BR /> Results: Thanks to
  the combination of three different epochs, GRAVITY resolves the inner
  dusty disk in the K band with squared visibilities down to V<SUP>2</SUP>
  ~ 0.8. A differential phase signal is also detected in the region of
  the Brγ line along most of the six baselines. Data modeling shows
  that an IR excess of about 6% is spatially resolved and that the
  origin of this emission is confined in a ring of material located at
  a radius of ~1 au from the star with a width ≲0.3 au. The MCMax
  modeling suggests that this emission could originate from a small
  amount (1.4 × 10<SUP>−8</SUP> M<SUB>⊕</SUB>) of quantum-heated
  particles, while large silicate grain models cannot reproduce at the
  same time the observational constraints on the properties of near-IR
  and mid-IR fluxes. The high spectral resolution differential phases
  in the Brγ line clearly show an S-shape that can be best reproduced
  with a gaseous disk in Keplerian rotation, confined within 0.09 au (or
  12.9 R<SUB>⋆</SUB>). This is also hinted at by the double-peaked Brγ
  emission line shape, known from previous observations and confirmed by
  GRAVITY. The modeling of the continuum and gas emission shows that the
  inclination and position angle of these two components are consistent
  with a system showing relatively coplanar rings on all scales. <BR />
  Conclusions: With a new and unique observational dataset on HD 141569,
  we show that the complex disk of this source is composed of a multitude
  of rings on all scales. This aspect makes HD 141569 a potentially
  unique source to investigate planet formation and disk evolution in
  intermediate-mass pre-main sequence stars.

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Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: BAT AGN Spectroscopic
    Survey. XVIII. Periodic var. (Liu+, 2020)
Authors: Liu, T.; Koss, M.; Blecha, L.; Ricci, C.; Trakhtenbrot,
   B.; Mushotzky, R.; Harrison, F.; Ichikawa, K.; Kakkad, D.; Oh, K.;
   Powell, M.; Privon, G. C.; Schawinski, K.; Shimizu, T. T.; Smith,
   K. L.; Stern, D.; Treister, E.; Urry, C. M.
2021yCat..18960122L    Altcode:
  Theory predicts that a supermassive black hole binary (SMBHB)
  could be observed as a luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN) that
  periodically varies on the order of its orbital timescale. In X-rays,
  periodic variations could be caused by mechanisms including relativistic
  Doppler boosting and shocks. Here we present the first systematic search
  for periodic AGNs using 941 hard X-ray light curves (14-195keV) from
  the first 105 months of the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) survey
  (2004-2013). We do not find evidence for periodic AGNs in Swift-BAT,
  including the previously reported SMBHB candidate MCG+11-11-032. We
  find that the null detection is consistent with the combination
  of the upper-limit binary population in AGNs in our adopted model,
  their expected periodic variability amplitudes, and the BAT survey
  characteristics. We have also investigated the detectability of
  SMBHBs against normal AGN X-ray variability in the context of the
  extended ROentgen Survey with an Imaging Telescope Array (eROSITA)
  survey. Under our assumptions of a binary population and the periodic
  signals they produce, which have long periods of hundreds of days,
  up to 13% true periodic binaries can be robustly distinguished from
  normal variable AGNs with the ideal uniform sampling. However,
  we demonstrate that realistic eROSITA sampling is likely to be
  insensitive to long-period binaries because longer observing gaps
  reduce their detectability. In contrast, large observing gaps do not
  diminish the prospect of detecting binaries of short, few-day periods,
  as 19% can be successfully recovered, the vast majority of which can
  be identified by the first half of the survey. <P />(1 data file).

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Title: Constraining particle acceleration in Sgr A<SUP>⋆</SUP>
    with simultaneous GRAVITY, Spitzer, NuSTAR, and Chandra observations
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck,
   M.; Baganoff, F.; Berger, J. P.; Boyce, H.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.;
   Clénet, Y.; Davies, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Dallilar, Y.;
   Drescher, A.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Fazio, G. G.; Förster
   Schreiber, N. M.; Foster, K.; Gammie, C.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.;
   Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Ghisellini, G.; Gillessen, S.; Gurwell,
   M. A.; Habibi, M.; Haggard, D.; Hailey, C.; Harrison, F. A.;
   Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.; Henning, T.; Hippler, S.; Hora, J. L.;
   Horrobin, M.; Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer,
   A.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.;
   Léna, P.; Lowrance, P. J.; Lutz, D.; Markoff, S.; Mori, K.; Morris,
   M. R.; Neilsen, J.; Nowak, M.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.;
   Perrin, G.; Ponti, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rabien, S.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.;
   Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.; Smith, H. A.; Stadler,
   J.; Stern, D. K.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi,
   L. J.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.;
   Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Willner, S. P.; Witzel, G.; Woillez,
   J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.; Zhang, S.; Zins, G.
2021A&A...654A..22G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210701096A
  We report the time-resolved spectral analysis of a bright near-infrared
  and moderate X-ray flare of Sgr A<SUP>⋆</SUP>. We obtained light
  curves in the M, K, and H bands in the mid- and near-infrared and in
  the 2 − 8 keV and 2 − 70 keV bands in the X-ray. The observed
  spectral slope in the near-infrared band is νL<SUB>ν</SUB> ∝
  ν<SUP>0.5 ± 0.2</SUP>; the spectral slope observed in the X-ray
  band is νL<SUB>ν</SUB> ∝ ν<SUP>−0.7 ± 0.5</SUP>. Using a fast
  numerical implementation of a synchrotron sphere with a constant radius,
  magnetic field, and electron density (i.e., a one-zone model), we tested
  various synchrotron and synchrotron self-Compton scenarios. The observed
  near-infrared brightness and X-ray faintness, together with the observed
  spectral slopes, pose challenges for all models explored. We rule out
  a scenario in which the near-infrared emission is synchrotron emission
  and the X-ray emission is synchrotron self-Compton. Two realizations
  of the one-zone model can explain the observed flare and its temporal
  correlation: one-zone model in which the near-infrared and X-ray
  luminosity are produced by synchrotron self-Compton and a model in
  which the luminosity stems from a cooled synchrotron spectrum. Both
  models can describe the mean spectral energy distribution (SED) and
  temporal evolution similarly well. In order to describe the mean SED,
  both models require specific values of the maximum Lorentz factor
  γ<SUB>max</SUB>, which differ by roughly two orders of magnitude. The
  synchrotron self-Compton model suggests that electrons are accelerated
  to γ<SUB>max</SUB> ∼ 500, while cooled synchrotron model requires
  acceleration up to γ<SUB>max</SUB> ∼ 5 × 10<SUP>4</SUP>. The
  synchrotron self-Compton scenario requires electron densities of
  10<SUP>10</SUP> cm<SUP>−3</SUP> that are much larger than typical
  ambient densities in the accretion flow. Furthermore, it requires a
  variation of the particle density that is inconsistent with the average
  mass-flow rate inferred from polarization measurements and can therefore
  only be realized in an extraordinary accretion event. In contrast,
  assuming a source size of 1 R<SUB>S</SUB>, the cooled synchrotron
  scenario can be realized with densities and magnetic fields comparable
  with the ambient accretion flow. For both models, the temporal evolution
  is regulated through the maximum acceleration factor γ<SUB>max</SUB>,
  implying that sustained particle acceleration is required to explain
  at least a part of the temporal evolution of the flare.

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Title: A geometric distance to the supermassive black Hole of NGC 3783
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Bentz,
   M. C.; Brandner, W.; Bolzer, M.; Clénet, Y.; Davies, R.; de
   Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Drescher, A.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.;
   Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen,
   S.; Gratadour, D.; Hönig, S.; Kaltenbrunner, D.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Lacour, S.; Lutz, D.; Millour, F.; Netzer, H.; Onken, C. A.; Ott,
   T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Petrucci, P. O.; Pfuhl,
   O.; Prieto, M. A.; Rouan, D.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler,
   J.; Sternberg, A.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Street, R.; Sturm,
   E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vermot, P.; von Fellenberg,
   S.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2021A&A...654A..85G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210714262G
  The angular size of the broad line region (BLR) of the nearby
  active galactic nucleus NGC 3783 has been spatially resolved by
  recent observations with VLTI/GRAVITY. A reverberation mapping (RM)
  campaign has also recently obtained high quality light curves and
  measured the linear size of the BLR in a way that is complementary to
  the GRAVITY measurement. The size and kinematics of the BLR can be
  better constrained by a joint analysis that combines both GRAVITY
  and RM data. This, in turn, allows us to obtain the mass of the
  supermassive black hole in NGC 3783 with an accuracy that is about a
  factor of two better than that inferred from GRAVITY data alone. We
  derive M<SUB>BH</SUB> = 2.54<SUB>−0.72</SUB><SUP>+0.90</SUP>
  × 10<SUP>7</SUP> M<SUB>⊙</SUB>. Finally, and perhaps most
  notably, we are able to measure a geometric distance to NGC 3783
  of 39.9<SUB>−11.9</SUB><SUP>+14.5</SUP> Mpc. We are able to test
  the robustness of the BLR-based geometric distance with measurements
  based on the Tully-Fisher relation and other indirect methods. We find
  the geometric distance is consistent with other methods within their
  scatter. We explore the potential of BLR-based geometric distances to
  directly constrain the Hubble constant, H<SUB>0</SUB>, and identify
  differential phase uncertainties as the current dominant limitation
  to the H<SUB>0</SUB> measurement precision for individual sources.

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Title: The GRAVITY young stellar object survey. VI. Mapping the
    variable inner disk of HD 163296 at sub-au scales
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Caratti O
   Garatti, A.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Perraut, K.; Labadie, L.; Benisty,
   M.; Brandner, W.; Dougados, C.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Henning, Th.;
   Klarmann, L.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Berger, J. P.; Le Bouquin,
   J. B.; Caselli, P.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; de Zeeuw,
   P. T.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Filho,
   M.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Grellmann,
   R.; Heissel, G.; Horrobin, M.; Hubert, Z.; Jiménez-Rosales, A.;
   Jocou, L.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Léna, P.; Ott,
   T.; Paumard, T.; Perrin, G.; Pineda, J. E.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.;
   Rousset, G.; Segura-Cox, D. M.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler,
   J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; van Dishoeck, E.; Vincent,
   F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2021A&A...654A..97G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210702391S
  Context. Protoplanetary disks drive some of the formation process
  (e.g., accretion, gas dissipation, formation of structures) of
  stars and planets. Understanding such physical processes is one
  of the most significant astrophysical questions. HD 163296 is an
  interesting young stellar object for which infrared and sub-millimeter
  observations have shown a prominent circumstellar disk with gaps
  plausibly created by forming planets. <BR /> Aims: This study aims
  to characterize the morphology of the inner disk in HD 163296 with
  multi-epoch, near-infrared interferometric observations performed
  with GRAVITY at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. Our goal
  is to depict the K-band (λ<SUB>0</SUB> ~ 2.2 μm) structure of the
  inner rim with milliarcsecond (sub-au) angular resolution. Our data is
  complemented with archival Precision Integrated-Optics Near-infrared
  Imaging ExpeRiment (H-band; λ<SUB>0</SUB> ~ 1.65 μm) data of the
  source. <BR /> Methods: We performed a gradient descent parametric
  model fitting to recover the sub-au morphology of our source. <BR />
  Results: Our analysis shows the existence of an asymmetry in the disk
  surrounding the central star of HD 163296. We confirm variability of
  the disk structure in the inner ~2 mas (0.2 au). While variability of
  the inner disk structure in this source has been suggested by previous
  interferometric studies, this is the first time that it is confirmed
  in the H- and K-bands by using a complete analysis of the closure
  phases and squared visibilities over several epochs. Because of the
  separation from the star, position changes, and the persistence of
  this asymmetric structure on timescales of several years, we argue
  that it is probably a dusty feature (e.g., a vortex or dust clouds)
  made by a mixing of silicate and carbon dust and/or refractory grains,
  inhomogeneously distributed above the mid-plane of the disk.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LLAMA: Stellar populations in the nuclei of ultra-hard
    X-ray-selected AGN and matched inactive galaxies
Authors: Burtscher, L.; Davies, R. I.; Shimizu, T. T.; Riffel,
   R.; Rosario, D. J.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Lin, M. -Y.; Riffel, R. A.;
   Schartmann, M.; Schnorr-Müller, A.; Storchi-Bergmann, T.; Orban de
   Xivry, G.; Veilleux, S.
2021A&A...654A.132B    Altcode: 2021arXiv210505309B
  The relation between nuclear (≲50 pc) star formation and nuclear
  galactic activity is still elusive; theoretical models predict a link
  between the two, but it is unclear whether active galactic nuclei
  (AGNs) should appear at the same time, before, or after nuclear star
  formation activity. We present a study of this relation in a complete,
  volume-limited sample of nine of the most luminous (log L<SUB>14 − 195
  keV</SUB> &gt; 10<SUP>42.5</SUP> erg s<SUP>−1</SUP>) local AGNs (the
  LLAMA sample), including a sample of 18 inactive control galaxies (six
  star-forming; 12 passive) that are matched by Hubble type, stellar mass
  (9.5 ≲ log M<SUB>⋆</SUB>/M<SUB>⊙</SUB> ≲ 10.5), inclination,
  and distance. This allows us to calibrate our methods on the control
  sample and perform a differential analysis between the AGN and control
  samples. We performed stellar population synthesis on VLT/X-shooter
  spectra in an aperture corresponding to a physical radius of ≈150
  pc. We find young (≲30 Myr) stellar populations in seven out of
  nine AGNs and in four out of six star-forming control galaxies. In
  the non-star-forming control population, in contrast, only two out of
  12 galaxies show such a population. We further show that these young
  populations are not indicative of ongoing star formation, providing
  evidence for models that see AGN activity as a consequence of nuclear
  star formation. Based on the similar nuclear star formation histories
  of AGNs and star-forming control galaxies, we speculate that the latter
  may turn into the former for some fraction of their time. Under this
  assumption, and making use of the volume completeness of our sample,
  we infer that the AGN phase lasts for about 5% of the nuclear starburst
  phase. <P />Spectra are only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to
  <A href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/">cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr</A>
  (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/654/A132">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/654/A132</A>

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Title: The mass of β Pictoris c from β Pictoris b orbital motion
Authors: Lacour, S.; Wang, J. J.; Rodet, L.; Nowak, M.; Shangguan, J.;
   Beust, H.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Asensio-Torres,
   R.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. -P.; Blunt, S.; Boccaletti, A.; Bohn, A.;
   Bolzer, M. -L.; Bonnefoy, M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourdarot, G.; Brandner,
   W.; Cantalloube, F.; Caselli, P.; Charnay, B.; Chauvin, G.; Choquet,
   E.; Christiaens, V.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Cridland,
   A.; Dembet, R.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Drescher, A.; Duvert,
   G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P.; Garcia Lopez,
   R.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Girard, J. H.; Haubois,
   X.; Heißel, G.; Henning, Th.; Hinkley, S.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin,
   M.; Houllé, M.; Hubert, Z.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Keppler, M.;
   Kervella, P.; Kreidberg, L.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna,
   P.; Lutz, D.; Maire, A. -L.; Mérand, A.; Mollière, P.; Monnier,
   J. D.; Mouillet, D.; Nasedkin, E.; Ott, T.; Otten, G. P. P. L.;
   Paladini, C.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.;
   Rickman, E.; Pueyo, L.; Rameau, J.; Rousset, G.; Rustamkulov,
   Z.; Samland, M.; Shimizu, T.; Sing, D.; Stadler, J.; Stolker, T.;
   Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; van Dishoeck,
   E. F.; Vigan, A.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.; Ward-Duong,
   K.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici,
   S.; Young, A.; Gravity Collaboration
2021A&A...654L...2L    Altcode: 2021arXiv210910671L
  <BR /> Aims: We aim to demonstrate that the presence and mass of
  an exoplanet can now be effectively derived from the astrometry of
  another exoplanet. <BR /> Methods: We combined previous astrometry
  of β Pictoris b with a new set of observations from the GRAVITY
  interferometer. The orbital motion of β Pictoris b is fit using Markov
  chain Monte Carlo simulations in Jacobi coordinates. The inner planet,
  β Pictoris c, was also reobserved at a separation of 96 mas, confirming
  the previous orbital estimations. <BR /> Results: From the astrometry
  of planet b only, we can (i) detect the presence of β Pictoris c and
  (ii) constrain its mass to 10.04<SUB>−3.10</SUB><SUP>+4.53</SUP>
  M<SUB>Jup</SUB>. If one adds the astrometry of β Pictoris c, the
  mass is narrowed down to 9.15<SUB>−1.06</SUB><SUP>+1.08</SUP>
  M<SUB>Jup</SUB>. The inclusion of radial velocity measurements does
  not affect the orbital parameters significantly, but it does slightly
  decrease the mass estimate to 8.89<SUB>−0.75</SUB><SUP>+0.75</SUP>
  M<SUB>Jup</SUB>. With a semimajor axis of 2.68 ± 0.02 au, a period
  of 1221 ± 15 days, and an eccentricity of 0.32 ± 0.02, the orbital
  parameters of β Pictoris c are now constrained as precisely as those
  of β Pictoris b. The orbital configuration is compatible with a
  high-order mean-motion resonance (7:1). The impact of the resonance
  on the planets' dynamics would then be negligible with respect to the
  secular perturbations, which might have played an important role in
  the eccentricity excitation of the outer planet.

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Title: The Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey (GATOS). I. ALMA
    images of dusty molecular tori in Seyfert galaxies
Authors: García-Burillo, S.; Alonso-Herrero, A.; Ramos Almeida,
   C.; González-Martín, O.; Combes, F.; Usero, A.; Hönig, S.;
   Querejeta, M.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Hunt, L. K.; Rosario, D.; Davies,
   R.; Boorman, P. G.; Bunker, A. J.; Burtscher, L.; Colina, L.;
   Díaz-Santos, T.; Gandhi, P.; García-Bernete, I.; García-Lorenzo,
   B.; Ichikawa, K.; Imanishi, M.; Izumi, T.; Labiano, A.; Levenson,
   N. A.; López-Rodríguez, E.; Packham, C.; Pereira-Santaella, M.;
   Ricci, C.; Rigopoulou, D.; Rouan, D.; Shimizu, T.; Stalevski, M.;
   Wada, K.; Williamson, D.
2021A&A...652A..98G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210410227G
  We present the first results of the Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow
  Survey (GATOS), a project aimed at understanding the properties of the
  dusty molecular tori and their connection to the host galaxy in nearby
  Seyfert galaxies. Our project expands the range of active galactic
  nuclei (AGN) luminosities and Eddington ratios covered by previous
  surveys of Seyferts conducted by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array
  (ALMA), allowing us to study the gas feeding and feedback cycle
  in a combined sample of 19 Seyferts. We used ALMA to obtain new
  images of the emission of molecular gas and dust using the CO(3-2)
  and HCO<SUP>+</SUP>(4-3) lines as well as their underlying continuum
  emission at 870 μm with high spatial resolutions (0.1″ ∼ 7 −
  13 pc) in the circumnuclear disks (CND) of ten nearby (D &lt; 28 Mpc)
  Seyfert galaxies selected from an ultra-hard X-ray survey. Our new
  ALMA observations detect 870 μm continuum and CO line emission from
  spatially resolved disks located around the AGN in all the sources. The
  bulk of the 870 μm continuum flux can be accounted for by thermal
  emission from dust in the majority of the targets. For most of the
  sources, the disks show a preponderant orientation perpendicular
  to the AGN wind axes, as expected for dusty molecular tori. The
  median diameters and molecular gas masses of the tori are ∼42
  pc and ∼6 × 10<SUP>5</SUP> M<SUB>⊙</SUB>, respectively. We
  also detected the emission of the 4-3 line of HCO<SUP>+</SUP> in
  four GATOS targets. The order of magnitude differences found in the
  CO/HCO<SUP>+</SUP> ratios within our combined sample point to a very
  different density radial stratification inside the dusty molecular
  tori of these Seyferts. We find a positive correlation between the
  line-of-sight gas column densities responsible for the absorption
  of X-rays and the molecular gas column densities derived from CO
  toward the AGN in our sources. Furthermore, the median values of
  both column densities are similar. This suggests that the neutral gas
  line-of-sight column densities of the dusty molecular tori imaged by
  ALMA significantly contribute to the obscuration of X-rays. The radial
  distributions of molecular gas in the CND of our combined sample show
  signs of nuclear-scale molecular gas deficits. We also detect molecular
  outflows in the sources that show the most extreme nuclear-scale gas
  deficits in our sample. These observations find for the first time
  supporting evidence that the imprint of AGN feedback is more extreme
  in higher luminosity and/or higher Eddington ratio Seyfert galaxies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: X-shooter spectra of AGN and
    inactive galaxies (Burtscher+, 2021)
Authors: Burtscher, L.; Davies, R. I.; Shimizu, T. T.; Riffel,
   R.; Rosario, D. J.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Lin, M. -Y.; Riffel, R. A.;
   Schartmann, M.; Schnorr-Mueller, A.; Storchi-Bergmann, T.; Orban de
   Xivry, G.; Veilleux, S.
2021yCat..36540132B    Altcode:
  Spectra of all observations considered for this publication, i.e. all
  49 observations mentioned in Table 2 of the paper. Please see Table
  2 for the authors' judgement regarding the data quality of these
  observations. <P />For any questions regarding the data or its quality,
  please contact Dr. Leonard Burtscher, burtscher(at)strw.leidenuniv.nl,
  www.ileo.de or on Twitter as (at)LeoBurtscher. <P />(2 data files).

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Title: GRAVITY K-band spectroscopy of HD 206893 B. Brown dwarf
    or exoplanet
Authors: Kammerer, J.; Lacour, S.; Stolker, T.; Mollière, P.;
   Sing, D. K.; Nasedkin, E.; Kervella, P.; Wang, J. J.; Ward-Duong,
   K.; Nowak, M.; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Asensio-Torres, R.; Bauböck,
   M.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. -P.; Beust, H.; Blunt, S.; Boccaletti,
   A.; Bohn, A.; Bolzer, M. -L.; Bonnefoy, M.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner,
   W.; Cantalloube, F.; Caselli, P.; Charnay, B.; Chauvin, G.; Choquet,
   E.; Christiaens, V.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé du Foresto, V.; Cridland,
   A.; Dembet, R.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Drescher, A.; Duvert,
   G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P.; Garcia Lopez,
   R.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Girard, J.; Haubois,
   X.; Heißel, G.; Henning, T.; Hinkley, S.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin,
   M.; Houllé, M.; Hubert, Z.; Jocou, L.; Keppler, M.; Kreidberg, L.;
   Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.;
   Lutz, D.; Maire, A. -L.; Mérand, A.; Monnier, J. D.; Mouillet, D.;
   Müller, A.; Ott, T.; Otten, G. P. P. L.; Paladini, C.; Paumard, T.;
   Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Pueyo, L.; Rameau, J.; Rodet, L.;
   Rousset, G.; Rustamkulov, Z.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler, J.;
   Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; van Dishoeck,
   E. F.; Vigan, A.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.; Widmann, F.;
   Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.
2021A&A...652A..57K    Altcode: 2021arXiv210608249K
  Context. Near-infrared interferometry has become a powerful tool
  for studying the orbital and atmospheric parameters of substellar
  companions. <BR /> Aims: We aim to reveal the nature of the reddest
  known substellar companion HD 206893 B by studying its near-infrared
  colors and spectral morphology and by investigating its orbital
  motion. <BR /> Methods: We fit atmospheric models for giant planets
  and brown dwarfs and perform spectral retrievals with petitRADTRANS
  and ATMO on the observed GRAVITY, SPHERE, and GPI spectra of HD 206893
  B. To recover its unusual spectral features, first and foremost its
  extremely red near-infrared color, we include additional extinction by
  high-altitude dust clouds made of enstatite grains in the atmospheric
  model fits. However, forsterite, corundum, and iron grains predict
  similar extinction curves for the grain sizes considered here. We
  also infer the orbital parameters of HD 206893 B by combining the ~100
  μas precision astrometry from GRAVITY with data from the literature
  and constrain the mass and position of HD 206893 C based on the Gaia
  proper motion anomaly of the system. <BR /> Results: The extremely
  red color and the very shallow 1.4 μm water absorption feature of
  HD 206893 B can be fit well with the adapted atmospheric models and
  spectral retrievals. By comparison with AMES-Cond evolutionary tracks,
  we find that only some atmosphericmodels predict physically plausible
  objects. Altogether, our analysis suggests an age of ~ 3-300 Myr and
  a mass of ~ 5-30 M<SUB>Jup</SUB> for HD 206893 B, which is consistent
  with previous estimates but extends the parameter space to younger and
  lower-mass objects. The GRAVITY astrometry points to an eccentric orbit
  (e = 0.29<SUB>−0.11</SUB><SUP>+0.06</SUP>) with a mutual inclination
  of &lt;34.4 deg with respectto the debris disk of the system. <BR />
  Conclusions: While HD 206893 B could in principle be a planetary-mass
  companion, this possibility hinges on the unknown influence of the
  inner companion on the mass estimate of 10<SUB>−4</SUB><SUP>+5</SUP>
  M<SUB>Jup</SUB> from radial velocity and Gaia as well as a relatively
  small but significant Argus moving group membership probability of
  ~ 61%. However, we find that if the mass of HD 206893 B is &lt;30
  M<SUB>Jup</SUB>, then the inner companion HD 206893 C should have a
  mass between ~ 8-15 M<SUB>Jup</SUB>. Finally, further spectroscopic
  or photometric observations at higher signal-to-noise and longer
  wavelengths are required to learn more about the composition and dust
  cloud properties of HD 206893 B. <P />Based on observations made with
  ESO telescopes at Paranal Observatory under program IDs 1103.B-0626
  and 1104.C-0651.

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Title: The Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey
    (GATOS). II. Torus and polar dust emission in nearby Seyfert galaxies
Authors: Alonso-Herrero, A.; García-Burillo, S.; Hönig, S. F.;
   García-Bernete, I.; Ramos Almeida, C.; González-Martín, O.;
   López-Rodríguez, E.; Boorman, P. G.; Bunker, A. J.; Burtscher, L.;
   Combes, F.; Davies, R.; Díaz-Santos, T.; Gandhi, P.; García-Lorenzo,
   B.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Hunt, L. K.; Ichikawa, K.; Imanishi, M.; Izumi,
   T.; Labiano, A.; Levenson, N. A.; Packham, C.; Pereira-Santaella,
   M.; Ricci, C.; Rigopoulou, D.; Roche, P.; Rosario, D. J.; Rouan, D.;
   Shimizu, T.; Stalevski, M.; Wada, K.; Williamson, D.
2021A&A...652A..99A    Altcode: 2021arXiv210700244A
  We compare high angular resolution mid-infrared (mid-IR) and Atacama
  Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) far-infrared (far-IR)
  images of twelve nearby (median 21 Mpc) Seyfert galaxies selected from
  the Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey (GATOS). The mid-IR
  unresolved emission contributes more than 60% of the nuclear (diameters
  of 1.5″ ∼ 150 pc) emission in most galaxies. By contrast, the ALMA
  870 μm continuum emission is mostlyresolved with a median diameter
  of 42 pc and typically along the equatorial direction of the torus
  (Paper I). The Eddington ratios and nuclear hydrogen column densities
  (N<SUB>H</SUB>) of half the sample are favorable to launching polar
  and/or equatorial dusty winds, according to numerical simulations. Six
  of these show mid-IR extended emission approximately in the polar
  direction as traced by the narrow line region and perpendicular to
  the ALMA emission. In a few galaxies, the nuclear N<SUB>H</SUB> might
  be too high to uplift large quantities of dusty material along the
  polar direction. Five galaxies have low N<SUB>H</SUB> and/or Eddington
  ratios and thus polar dusty winds are not likely. We generated new
  radiative transfer CAT3D-WIND disk+wind models and model images at
  8, 12, and 700 μm. We tailored these models to the properties of
  the GATOS Seyferts in this work. At low wind-to-disk cloud ratios,
  the far-IR model images have disk- and ring-like morphologies. The
  characteristic "X"-shape associated with dusty winds is seen better
  in the far-IR at intermediate-high inclinations for the extended-wind
  configurations. In most of the explored models, the mid-IR emission
  mainly comes from the inner part of the disk and cone. Extended
  biconical and one-sided polar mid-IR emission is seen in extended-wind
  configurations and high wind-to-disk cloud ratios. When convolved to
  the typical angular resolution of our observations, the CAT3D-WIND
  model images reproduce qualitative aspects of the observed mid-
  and far-IR morphologies. However, low to intermediate values of
  the wind-to-disk ratio are required to account for the observed
  large fractions of unresolved mid-IR emission in our sample. This
  work and Paper I provide observational support for the torus+wind
  scenario. The wind component is more relevant at high Eddington ratios
  and/or active galactic nucleus luminosities, and polar dust emission
  is predicted at nuclear column densities of up to ∼10<SUP>24</SUP>
  cm<SUP>−2</SUP>. The torus or disk component, on the other hand,
  prevails at low luminosities and/or Eddington ratios.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MOLsphere and pulsations of the Galactic Center's red
    supergiant GCIRS 7 from VLTI/GRAVITY
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Paumard, T.;
   Perrin, G.; Vincent, F.; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Berger,
   J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter,
   J.; Drescher, A.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster Schreiber,
   N. M.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.;
   Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.; Henning, T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.;
   Jimenez-Rosales, A.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.; Kervella, P.;
   Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. B.; Léna, P.; Nowak, M.;
   Ott, T.; Perraut, K.; Pfuhl, O.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Shangguan, J.;
   Scheithauer, S.; Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.;
   Tacconi, L. J.; Shimizu, T.; von Fellenberg, S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Zins, G.
2021A&A...651A..37G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210509832G
  Context. GCIRS 7, the brightest star in the Galactic central parsec,
  formed 6 ± 2 Myr ago together with dozens of massive stars in a
  disk orbiting the central black-hole. It has been argued that GCIRS
  7 is a pulsating body, on the basis of photometric variability. <BR
  /> Aims: Our goal is to confirm photospheric pulsations based on
  interferometric size measurements to better understand how the mass loss
  from these massive stars enriches the local interstellar medium. <BR
  /> Methods: We present the first medium-resolution (R = 500), K-band
  spectro-interferometric observations of GCIRS 7, using the GRAVITY
  instrument with the four auxiliary telescopes of the ESO VLTI. We
  looked for variations using two epochs, namely 2017 and 2019. <BR />
  Results: We find GCIRS 7 to be moderately resolved with a uniform-disk
  photospheric diameter of θ<SUB>UD</SUB><SUP>*</SUP> = 1.55 ± 0.03
  mas (R<SUB>UD</SUB><SUP>*</SUP> = 1368 ± 26 R<SUB>⊙</SUB>) in the
  K-band continuum. The narrow-band uniform-disk diameter increases
  above 2.3 μm, with a clear correlation with the CO band heads in the
  spectrum. This correlation is aptly modeled by a hot (T<SUB>L</SUB> =
  2368 ± 37 K), geometrically thin molecular shell with a diameter of
  θ<SUB>L</SUB> = 1.74 ± 0.03 mas, as measured in 2017. The shell
  diameter increased (θ<SUB>L</SUB> = 1.89 ± 0.03 mas), while its
  temperature decreased (T<SUB>L</SUB> = 2140 ± 42 K) in 2019. In
  contrast, the photospheric diameter θ<SUB>UD</SUB><SUP>*</SUP> and the
  extinction up to the photosphere of GCIRS 7 (A<SUB>K<SUB>S</SUB></SUB>
  = 3.18 ± 0.16) have the same value within uncertainties at the two
  epochs. <BR /> Conclusions: In the context of previous interferometric
  and photo-spectrometric measurements, the GRAVITY data allow for an
  interpretation in terms of photospheric pulsations. The photospheric
  diameter measured in 2017 and 2019 is significantly larger than
  previously reported using the PIONIER instrument (θ<SUB>*</SUB> = 1.076
  ± 0.093 mas in 2013 in the H band). The parameters of the photosphere
  and molecular shell of GCIRS 7 are comparable to those of other red
  supergiants that have previously been studied using interferometry. The
  extinction we measured here is lower than previous estimates in the
  direction of GCIRS 7 but typical for the central parsec region. <P
  />Based on observations made with ESO Telescopes at the La Silla
  Paranal Observatory under the programme IDs 098.D-0250 and 103.B-0032.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Instrumental design of the Solar Observing Satellite:
    solar-C_EUVST
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hara, Hirohisa;
   Kawate, Tomoko; Katsukawa, Yukio; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Imada, Shinsuke
2021SPIE11852E..3KS    Altcode:
  The EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope (EUVST) of Solar-C
  mission is a revolutionary spectrometer that is designed to provide
  high-quality and high cadence spectroscopic data covering a wide
  temperature range of the chromosphere to flaring corona to investigate
  the energetics and dynamics of the solar atmosphere. The EUVST consists
  of only two imaging optical components; a 28-cm clear aperture off-axis
  parabolic primary mirror and a two-split ellipsoidal grating without a
  blocking filter for visible light before the primary mirror to achieve
  unprecedented high spatial and temporal resolution in EUV-UV imaging
  spectroscopic observations. For this reason, about 53 W of sunlight
  is absorbed by the multilayer coating on the mirror. We present an
  instrumental design of the telescope, particularly, primary mirror
  assembly which enables slit-scan observations for imaging spectroscopy,
  an image stabilizing tip-tilt control, and a focus adjustment on
  orbit, together with an optomechanical design of the primary mirror
  and its supporting system which gives optically tolerant wavefront
  error against a large temperature increase due to an absorption of
  visible and IR lights.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kiloparsec view of a typical star-forming galaxy when the
    Universe was ∼1 Gyr old. I. Properties of outflow, halo, and
    interstellar medium
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Förster Schreiber, N.; Genzel, R.;
   Tacconi, L.; Bolatto, A.; Davies, R. L.; Fisher, D.; Lutz, D.; Naab,
   T.; Shimizu, T.; Tadaki, K.; Übler, H.
2021A&A...649A..31H    Altcode: 2021arXiv210105279H
  We present new Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array observations
  of the [C II] 158 μm transition and the dust continuum in HZ4, a
  typical star-forming galaxy when the Universe was only ∼1 Gyr old
  (z ≈ 5.5). Our high ≈0.3″ spatial resolution allows us to study
  the relationships between [C II] line emission, star formation rate, and
  far-infrared emission on spatial scales of ∼2 kpc. In the central ∼4
  kpc of HZ4, the [C II]/FIR is ∼3 × 10<SUP>−3</SUP> on global scales
  as well as on spatially resolved scales of ∼2 kpc, comparable to the
  ratio observed in local moderate starburst galaxies such as M 82 or M
  83. For the first time in an individual normal galaxy at this redshift,
  we find evidence for outflowing gas from the central star-forming region
  in the direction of the minor axis of the galaxy. The projected velocity
  of the outflow is ∼400 km s<SUP>−1</SUP>, and the neutral gas-mass
  outflow rate is ∼3 − 6 times higher than the star formation rate in
  the central region. Finally, we detect a diffuse component of [C II]
  emission, or [C II] halo, that extends beyond the star-forming disk
  and has a diameter of ∼12 kpc. The outflow, which has a velocity
  approximately half of the escape velocity of the system, most likely
  partly fuels the [C II] extended emission. Together with the kinematic
  analysis of HZ4 (presented in a forthcoming paper), the analysis
  supports the hypothesis that HZ4 is a typical star-forming disk at
  z ∼ 5 with interstellar medium conditions similar to present-day
  galaxies forming stars at a similar level, driving a galactic outflow
  that may already play a role in its evolution. <P />The reduced images
  and datacubes are only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/">cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr</A>
  (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/649/A31">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/649/A31</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: Completed KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP>
    survey NIR obs. (Wisnioski+,
Authors: Wisnioski, E.; Schreiber, N. M. F.; Fossati, M.; Mendel,
   J. T.; Wilman, D.; Genzel, R.; Bender, R.; Wuyts, S.; Davies, R. L.;
   Ubler, H.; Bandara, K.; Beifiori, A.; Belli, S.; Brammer, G.; Chan, J.;
   Davies, R. I.; Fabricius, M.; Galametz, A.; Lang, P.; Lutz, D.; Nelson,
   E. J.; Momcheva, I.; Price, S.; Rosario, D.; Saglia, R.; Seitz, S.;
   Shimizu, T.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tadaki, K.; van Dokkum, P. G.; Wuyts, E.
2021yCat..18860124W    Altcode:
  Observations with the multi-IFU K-band Multi Object Spectrograph (KMOS)
  at the VLT took place in Visitor Mode over 75 guaranteed time nights
  between 2013 October and 2018 April (ESO periods 92-101). The spectral
  resolution of KMOS (R~3000-4000) varies for the 24 different IFUs. <P
  />(3 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: BAT AGN Spectroscopic
    Survey. XX. Molecular gas (Koss+, 2021)
Authors: Koss, M. J.; Strittmatter, B.; Lamperti, I.; Shimizu, T.;
   Trakhtenbrot, B.; Saintonge, A.; Treister, E.; Cicone, C.; Mushotzky,
   R.; Oh, K.; Ricci, C.; Stern, D.; Ananna, T. T.; Bauer, F. E.; Privon,
   G. C.; Bar, R. E.; De Breuck, C.; Harrison, F.; Ichikawa, K.; Powell,
   M. C.; Rosario, D.; Sanders, D. B.; Schawinski, K.; Shao, Li; Megan
   Urry, C.; Veilleux, S.
2021yCat..22520029K    Altcode:
  Our AGN parent sample consists of 836 ultrahard-X-ray-selected
  (14-195keV) AGN included in the 70-month Swift-BAT all-sky catalog
  (Baumgartner+ 2013, J/ApJS/207/19). <P />In total, 200 AGN galaxies
  were newly observed: 165 with the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment
  (APEX) and 35 with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), while
  13 were obtained from the literature (see col. Tel in table 2 and
  Section 2.1.3). <P />The APEX 12m antenna observations totalled 254hr
  with 2288 400s long scans, taken over 67 days between 2016 March
  and 2017 September. The observing programs involved were mainly an
  ESO Large program (PI M. Koss, ~150hr), a follow-up ESO program
  (PI B. Trakthenbrot, ~50hr), and Chilean time (PI E. Treister,
  ~75hr). In addition to our own programs, we also reduced data from
  archival programs for six BAT AGN galaxies. We observed the CO(2-1)
  transition (v<SUB>rest</SUB>=230.538GHz) using the Swedish Heterodyne
  Facility Instrument (SHFI) with the eXtended Fast Fourier Transform
  Spectrometer (XFFTS) backend (213-275GHz). <P />JCMT observations of
  the CO(2-1) molecular line were taken between 2011 February and 2013
  April. Archival data for one additional galaxy were also reduced
  (NGC 6240). We used the A3 (211-279GHz) receiver with the ACSIS
  spectrometer with a beam size of 20.4" HPBW. <P />The results for the
  complementary sample of z&lt;0.01 BAT AGN galaxies are presented in
  Rosario+ (2018MNRAS.473.5658R). <P />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: [CCJ2015b] HZ4 [CII] 158um datacube
    (Herrera-Camus+, 2021)
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Foerster Schreiber, N.; Genzel, R.;
   Tacconi, L.; Bolatto, A.; Davies, R. L.; Fisher, D.; Lutz, D.; Naab,
   T.; Shimizu, T.; Tadaki, K.; Uebler, H.
2021yCat..36490031H    Altcode:
  Between November 2018 and April 2019 (Cycle 6), HZ4 (R.A. 9:58:28.5,
  Dec. +2:03:06.7) was observed for 8.4hr in total (4.7hr on-source)
  using ALMA as part of project 2018.1.01605.S (PI Herrera-Camus). The
  observations were carried out in the C43-4 configuration. We centered
  one spectral window on the [CII] line (νrest=1900.537GHz), which for
  the source is redshifted to νobs=290.386GHz and falls in Band 7. <P
  />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The GRAVITY young stellar object survey. V. The orbit of the
    T Tauri binary star WW Cha
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Eupen, F.; Labadie, L.; Grellmann, R.;
   Perraut, K.; Brandner, W.; Duchêne, G.; Köhler, R.; Sanchez-Bermudez,
   J.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Caratti O Garatti, A.; Benisty, M.; Dougados,
   C.; Garcia, P.; Klarmann, L.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Berger,
   J. P.; Caselli, P.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; de Zeeuw,
   P. T.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Filho,
   M.; Ganci, V.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.;
   Heissel, G.; Henning, Th.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Hubert, Z.;
   Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jocou, L.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Le Bouquin, J. B.; Léna, P.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perrin,
   G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rousset, G.; Scheithauer, S.;
   Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier,
   C.; Sturm, E.; van Dishoeck, E.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.;
   Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.; Wojtczak, A.
2021A&A...648A..37G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210200122G
  Context. Close young binary stars are unique laboratories for the
  direct measurement of pre-main-sequence (PMS) stellar masses and
  their comparison to evolutionary theoretical models. At the same
  time, a precise knowledge of their orbital parameters when still
  in the PMS phase offers an excellent opportunity for understanding
  the influence of dynamical effects on the morphology and lifetime of
  the circumstellar as well as circumbinary material. <BR /> Aims: The
  young T Tauri star WW Cha was recently proposed to be a close binary
  object with strong infrared and submillimeter excess associated
  with circum-system emission, which makes it dynamically a very
  interesting source in the above context. The goal of this work is
  to determine the astrometric orbit and the stellar properties of WW
  Cha using multi-epoch interferometric observations. <BR /> Methods:
  We derive the relative astrometric positions and flux ratios of the
  stellar companion in WW Cha from the interferometric model fitting of
  observations made with the VLTI instruments AMBER, PIONIER, and GRAVITY
  in the near-infrared from 2011 to 2020. For two epochs, the resulting
  uv-coverage in spatial frequencies permits us to perform the first
  image reconstruction of the system in the K band. The positions of nine
  epochs are used to determine the orbital elements and the total mass of
  the system. Combining the orbital solution with distance measurements
  from Gaia DR2 and the analysis of evolutionary tracks, we constrain
  the mass ratio. <BR /> Results: We find the secondary star orbiting
  the primary with a period of T = 206.55 days, a semimajor axis of a =
  1.01 au, and a relatively high eccentricity of e = 0.45. The dynamical
  mass of M<SUB>tot</SUB> = 3.20 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> can be explained by
  a mass ratio between ∼0.5 and 1, indicating an intermediate-mass T
  Tauri classification for both components. The orbital angular momentum
  vector is in close alignment with the angular momentum vector of the
  outer disk as measured by ALMA and SPHERE, resulting in a small mutual
  disk inclination. The analysis of the relative photometry suggests
  the presence of infrared excess surviving in the system and likely
  originating from truncated circumstellar disks. The flux ratio between
  the two components appears variable, in particular in the K band,
  and may hint at periods of triggered higher and lower accretion or
  changes in the disks' structures. <BR /> Conclusions: The knowledge of
  the orbital parameters, combined with a relatively short period, makes
  WW Cha an ideal target for studying the interaction of a close young
  T Tauri binary with its surrounding material, such as time-dependent
  accretion phenomena. Finding WW Cha to be composed of two (probably
  similar) stars led us to reevaluate the mass of WW Cha, which had been
  previously derived under the assumption of a single star. This work
  illustrates the potential of long baseline interferometry to precisely
  characterize close young binary stars separated by a few astronomical
  units. Finally, when combined with radial velocity measurements,
  individual stellar masses can be derived and used to calibrate
  theoretical PMS models. <P />GRAVITY is developed in collaboration
  by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, LESIA of
  Paris Observatory, IPAG of Université Grenoble Alpes/CNRS, the Max
  Planck Institute for Astronomy, the University of Cologne, the Centro
  de Astrofísica e Gravitação, and the European Southern Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The central parsec of NGC 3783: a rotating broad emission line
    region, asymmetric hot dust structure, and compact coronal line region
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Brandner,
   W.; Bolzer, M.; Clénet, Y.; Davies, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.;
   Drescher, A.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Gratadour, D.;
   Hönig, S.; Kaltenbrunner, D.; Kishimoto, M.; Lacour, S.; Lutz, D.;
   Millour, F.; Netzer, H.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin,
   G.; Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. O.; Pfuhl, O.; Prieto, M. A.; Rouan,
   D.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Schartmann,
   M.; Stadler, J.; Sternberg, A.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm,
   E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vermot, P.; von Fellenberg,
   S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2021A&A...648A.117G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210200068G
  Using VLTI/GRAVITY and SINFONI data, we investigate the subparsec
  gas and dust structure around the nearby type 1 active galactic
  nucleus (AGN) hosted by NGC 3783. The K-band coverage of GRAVITY
  uniquely allows simultaneous analysis of the size and kinematics
  of the broad line region (BLR), the size and structure of the
  near-infrared(near-IR)-continuum-emitting hot dust, and the size of the
  coronal line region (CLR). We find the BLR, probed through broad Brγ
  emission, to be well described by a rotating, thick disc with a radial
  distribution of clouds peaking in the inner region. In our BLR model,
  the physical mean radius of 16 light-days is nearly twice the ten-day
  time-lag that would be measured, which closely matches the ten-day
  time-lag that has been measured by reverberation mapping. We measure a
  hot dust full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) size of 0.74 mas (0.14 pc)
  and further reconstruct an image of the hot dust, which reveals a faint
  (5% of the total flux) offset cloud that we interpret as an accreting
  or outflowing cloud heated by the central AGN. Finally, we directly
  measure the FWHM size of the nuclear CLR as traced by the [Ca VIII] and
  narrow Brγ line. We find a FWHM size of 2.2 mas (0.4 pc), fully in line
  with the expectation of the CLR located between the BLR and narrow line
  region. Combining all of these measurements together with larger scale
  near-IR integral field unit and mid-IR interferometry data, we are able
  to comprehensively map the structure and dynamics of gas and dust from
  0.01 to 100 pc. <P />GRAVITY is developed in a collaboration by the Max
  Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, LESIA of Observatoire de
  Paris/Université PSL/CNRS/Sorbonne Université/Université de Paris
  and IPAG of Université Grenoble Alpes/CNRS, the Max Planck Institute
  for Astronomy, the University of Cologne, the CENTRA - Centro de
  Astrofisica e Gravitação, and the European Southern Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Constraining the Nature of the PDS 70 Protoplanets with
    VLTI/GRAVITY
Authors: Wang, J. J.; Vigan, A.; Lacour, S.; Nowak, M.; Stolker,
   T.; De Rosa, R. J.; Ginzburg, S.; Gao, P.; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.;
   Asensio-Torres, R.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. P.; Beust,
   H.; Beuzit, J. -L.; Blunt, S.; Boccaletti, A.; Bohn, A.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.; Cantalloube, F.; Caselli, P.; Charnay,
   B.; Chauvin, G.; Choquet, E.; Christiaens, V.; Clénet, Y.; Coudé
   Du Foresto, V.; Cridland, A.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dembet, R.; Dexter,
   J.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Facchini,
   S.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Gardner, T.; Gendron,
   E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Girard, J.; Haubois, X.; Heißel,
   G.; Henning, T.; Hinkley, S.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Houllé, M.;
   Hubert, Z.; Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Keppler, M.;
   Kervella, P.; Meyer, M.; Kreidberg, L.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Maire, A. -L.; Ménard,
   F.; Mérand, A.; Mollière, P.; Monnier, J. D.; Mouillet, D.; Müller,
   A.; Nasedkin, E.; Ott, T.; Otten, G. P. P. L.; Paladini, C.; Paumard,
   T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Pueyo, L.; Rameau, J.; Rodet,
   L.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rousset, G.; Scheithauer, S.; Shangguan,
   J.; Shimizu, T.; Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.;
   Tacconi, L. J.; van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg,
   S. D.; Ward-Duong, K.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.;
   Woillez, J.; Gravity Collaboration
2021AJ....161..148W    Altcode: 2021arXiv210104187W
  We present K-band interferometric observations of the PDS 70
  protoplanets along with their host star using VLTI/GRAVITY. We obtained
  K-band spectra and 100 μas precision astrometry of both PDS 70 b
  and c in two epochs, as well as spatially resolving the hot inner
  disk around the star. Rejecting unstable orbits, we found a nonzero
  eccentricity for PDS 70 b of 0.17 ± 0.06, a near-circular orbit
  for PDS 70 c, and an orbital configuration that is consistent with
  the planets migrating into a 2:1 mean motion resonance. Enforcing
  dynamical stability, we obtained a 95% upper limit on the mass
  of PDS 70 b of 10 M<SUB>Jup</SUB>, while the mass of PDS 70 c was
  unconstrained. The GRAVITY K-band spectra rules out pure blackbody
  models for the photospheres of both planets. Instead, the models with
  the most support from the data are planetary atmospheres that are
  dusty, but the nature of the dust is unclear. Any circumplanetary
  dust around these planets is not well constrained by the planets'
  1-5 μm spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and requires longer
  wavelength data to probe with SED analysis. However with VLTI/GRAVITY,
  we made the first observations of a circumplanetary environment with
  sub-astronomical-unit spatial resolution, placing an upper limit of
  0.3 au on the size of a bright disk around PDS 70 b. <SUP>∗</SUP>
  Based on observations collected at the European Southern Observatory
  under ESO programmes 0101.C-0281(B), 1103.B-0626(A), 2103.C-5018(A),
  and 1104.C-0651(A).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Improved GRAVITY astrometric accuracy from modeling optical
    aberrations
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck,
   M.; Berger, J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; Davies,
   R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Dallilar, Y.; Drescher, A.; Eckart,
   A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Garcia, P.; Gao,
   F.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.;
   Heißel, G.; Henning, T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Jiménez-Rosales,
   A.; Jochum, L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.;
   Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Nowak, M.;
   Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rabien, S.;
   Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.;
   Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht,
   E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Young, A.; Zins, G.
2021A&A...647A..59G    Altcode: 2021arXiv210112098G
  The GRAVITY instrument on the ESO VLTI pioneers the field of
  high-precision near-infrared interferometry by providing astrometry at
  the 10-100 μas level. Measurements at this high precision crucially
  depend on the control of systematic effects. We investigate how
  aberrations introduced by small optical imperfections along the path
  from the telescope to the detector affect the astrometry. We develop
  an analytical model that describes the effect of these aberrations on
  the measurement of complex visibilities. Our formalism accounts for
  pupil-plane and focal-plane aberrations, as well as for the interplay
  between static and turbulent aberrations, and it successfully reproduces
  calibration measurements of a binary star. The Galactic Center
  observations with GRAVITY in 2017 and 2018, when both Sgr A* and the
  star S2 were targeted in a single fiber pointing, are affected by these
  aberrations at a level lower than 0.5 mas. Removal of these effects
  brings the measurement in harmony with the dual-beam observations
  of 2019 and 2020, which are not affected by these aberrations. This
  also resolves the small systematic discrepancies between the derived
  distance R<SUB>0</SUB> to the Galactic Center that were reported
  previously. <P />GRAVITY is developed in a collaboration by the Max
  Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics, LESIA of Observatoire de
  Paris/Université PSL/CNRS/Sorbonne Université/Université de Paris
  and IPAG of Université Grenoble Alpes/CNRS, the Max Planck Institute
  for Astronomy, the University of Cologne, the CENTRA - Centro de
  Astrofisica e Gravitação, and the European Southern Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> Survey: Investigating the Origin of the
    Elevated Electron Densities in Star-forming Galaxies at 1 ≲ z ≲ 3
Authors: Davies, Rebecca L.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Genzel, R.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Davies, R. I.; Schruba, A.; Tacconi, L. J.; Übler,
   H.; Wisnioski, E.; Wuyts, S.; Fossati, M.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Lutz,
   D.; Mendel, J. T.; Naab, T.; Price, S. H.; Renzini, A.; Wilman,
   D.; Beifiori, A.; Belli, S.; Burkert, A.; Chan, J.; Contursi, A.;
   Fabricius, M.; Lee, M. M.; Saglia, R. P.; Sternberg, A.
2021ApJ...909...78D    Altcode: 2020arXiv201210445D
  We investigate what drives the redshift evolution of the typical
  electron density (n<SUB>e</SUB>) in star-forming galaxies, using
  a sample of 140 galaxies drawn primarily from KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP>
  (0.6 &lt; z &lt; 2.6) and 471 galaxies from SAMI (z &lt; 0.113). We
  select galaxies that do not show evidence of active galactic
  nucleus activity or outflows to constrain the average conditions
  within H II regions. Measurements of the [S II]λ6716/[S II]λ6731
  ratio in four redshift bins indicate that the local n<SUB>e</SUB>
  in the line-emitting material decreases from 187 ${}_{-132}^{+140}$
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> at z ∼ 2.2 to 32 ${}_{-9}^{+4}$ cm<SUP>-3</SUP> at z
  ∼ 0, consistent with previous results. We use the Hα luminosity to
  estimate the rms n<SUB>e</SUB> averaged over the volumes of star-forming
  disks at each redshift. The local and volume-averaged n<SUB>e</SUB>
  evolve at similar rates, hinting that the volume filling factor of
  the line-emitting gas may be approximately constant across 0 ≲
  z ≲ 2.6. The KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> and SAMI galaxies follow a roughly
  monotonic trend between n<SUB>e</SUB> and star formation rate, but the
  KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> galaxies have systematically higher n<SUB>e</SUB> than
  the SAMI galaxies at a fixed offset from the star-forming main sequence,
  suggesting a link between the n<SUB>e</SUB> evolution and the evolving
  main sequence normalization. We quantitatively test potential drivers
  of the density evolution and find that n<SUB>e</SUB>(rms) $\simeq
  {n}_{{{\rm{H}}}_{2}}$ , suggesting that the elevated n<SUB>e</SUB>
  in high-z H II regions could plausibly be the direct result of higher
  densities in the parent molecular clouds. There is also tentative
  evidence that n<SUB>e</SUB> could be influenced by the balance between
  stellar feedback, which drives the expansion of H II regions, and the
  ambient pressure, which resists their expansion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Diverse Molecular Gas Content of Massive Galaxies
    Undergoing Quenching at z ∼ 1
Authors: Belli, Sirio; Contursi, Alessandra; Genzel, Reinhard; Tacconi,
   Linda J.; Förster-Schreiber, Natascha M.; Lutz, Dieter; Combes,
   Françoise; Neri, Roberto; García-Burillo, Santiago; Schuster,
   Karl F.; Herrera-Camus, Rodrigo; Tadaki, Ken-ichi; Davies, Rebecca
   L.; Davies, Richard I.; Johnson, Benjamin D.; Lee, Minju M.; Leja,
   Joel; Nelson, Erica J.; Price, Sedona H.; Shangguan, Jinyi; Shimizu,
   T. Taro; Tacchella, Sandro; Übler, Hannah
2021ApJ...909L..11B    Altcode: 2021arXiv210207881B
  We present a detailed study of the molecular gas content and stellar
  population properties of three massive galaxies at 1 &lt; z &lt; 1.3
  that are in different stages of quenching. The galaxies were selected
  to have quiescent optical/near-infrared spectral energy distribution
  and relatively bright emission at 24 μm, and show remarkably diverse
  properties. CO emission from each of the three galaxies is detected in
  deep NOEMA observations, allowing us to derive molecular gas fractions
  M<SUB>gas</SUB>/M<SUB>*</SUB> of 13%-23%. We also reconstruct the star
  formation histories by fitting models to the observed photometry and
  optical spectroscopy, finding evidence for recent rejuvenation in one
  object, slow quenching in another, and rapid quenching in the third
  system. To better constrain the quenching mechanism we explore the
  depletion times for our sample and other similar samples at z ∼
  0.7 from the literature. We find that the depletion times are highly
  dependent on the method adopted to measure the star formation rate:
  using the UV+IR luminosity we obtain depletion times about 6 times
  shorter than those derived using dust-corrected [O II] emission. When
  adopting the star formation rates from spectral fitting, which
  are arguably more robust, we find that recently quenched galaxies
  and star-forming galaxies have similar depletion times, while older
  quiescent systems have longer depletion times. These results offer new,
  important constraints for physical models of galaxy quenching.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mapping solar magnetic fields from the photosphere to the
    base of the corona
Authors: Ishikawa, Ryohko; Bueno, Javier Trujillo; del Pino Alemán,
   Tanausú; Okamoto, Takenori J.; McKenzie, David E.; Auchère,
   Frédéric; Kano, Ryouhei; Song, Donguk; Yoshida, Masaki; Rachmeler,
   Laurel A.; Kobayashi, Ken; Hara, Hirohisa; Kubo, Masahito; Narukage,
   Noriyuki; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Bethge,
   Christian; De Pontieu, Bart; Dalda, Alberto Sainz; Vigil, Genevieve D.;
   Winebarger, Amy; Ballester, Ernest Alsina; Belluzzi, Luca; Štěpán,
   Jiří; Ramos, Andrés Asensio; Carlsson, Mats; Leenaarts, Jorrit
2021SciA....7.8406I    Altcode: 2021arXiv210301583I
  Routine ultraviolet imaging of the Sun's upper atmosphere shows the
  spectacular manifestation of solar activity; yet we remain blind to
  its main driver, the magnetic field. Here we report unprecedented
  spectropolarimetric observations of an active region plage and
  its surrounding enhanced network, showing circular polarization in
  ultraviolet (Mg II $h$ &amp; $k$ and Mn I) and visible (Fe I) lines. We
  infer the longitudinal magnetic field from the photosphere to the
  very upper chromosphere. At the top of the plage chromosphere the
  field strengths reach more than 300 gauss, strongly correlated with
  the Mg II $k$ line core intensity and the electron pressure. This
  unique mapping shows how the magnetic field couples the different
  atmospheric layers and reveals the magnetic origin of the heating in
  the plage chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionized outflows in local luminous AGN: Density and outflow
    rate
Authors: Davies, R.; Baron, D.; Shimizu, T.; Netzer, H.
2021IAUS..359..226D    Altcode:
  We use the LLAMA survey to study the density and outflow rate of ionized
  gas in a complete volume limited sample of local (&lt;40 Mpc) luminous
  (43.0 &lt; log L<SUB>AGN</SUB>(erg/s) &lt; 44.5) AGN selected by very
  hard 14-195 keV X-rays. The detailed data available for this survey
  enable us to measure the density of the outflowing ionized gas in
  the central 300 pc of these AGN using three different and independent
  methods (the standard [SII] doublet ratio; a method comparing [OII]
  and [SII] ratios that include auroral and transauroral lines; and a
  recently proposed method based on the ionization parameter). For each
  method there is, as expected, a modest spread of densities among the
  AGN in the sample. But remarkably, the median densities for each method
  differ hugely, by an order of magnitude from below 400 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>
  to almost 5000 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>. We discuss how the derived densities
  can be reconciled, and what the impact is on the implied outflow rate.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Detection of faint stars near Sagittarius A* with GRAVITY
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.;
   Berger, J. P.; Bonnet, H.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; Dallilar, Y.;
   Davies, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Drescher, A.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Garcia, P.; Gao, F.; Gendron, E.;
   Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Habibi, M.; Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.;
   Henning, T.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kaufer, A.; Kervella, P.; Lacour, S.; Lapeyrère, V.;
   Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lutz, D.; Nowak, M.; Ott, T.; Paumard,
   T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rabien, S.; Rodríguez-Coira,
   G.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Scheithauer, S.; Stadler, J.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Vincent, F.; von
   Fellenberg, S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek,
   E.; Woillez, J.; Yazici, S.; Zins, G.
2021A&A...645A.127G    Altcode: 2020arXiv201103058G
  The spin of the supermassive black hole that resides at the Galactic
  Center can, in principle, be measured by accurate measurements
  of the orbits of stars that are much closer to Sgr A* than S2, the
  orbit of which recently provided the measurement of the gravitational
  redshift and the Schwarzschild precession. The GRAVITY near-infrared
  interferometric instrument combining the four 8m telescopes of the VLT
  provides a spatial resolution of 2-4 mas, breaking the confusion barrier
  for adaptive-optics-assisted imaging with a single 8-10m telescope. We
  used GRAVITY to observe Sgr A* over a period of six months in 2019 and
  employed interferometric reconstruction methods developed in radio
  astronomy to search for faint objects near Sgr A*. This revealed a
  slowly moving star of magnitude 18.9 in the K-band within 30 mas of Sgr
  A*. The position and proper motion of the star are consistent with the
  previously known star S62, which is at a substantially greater physical
  distance, but in projection passes close to Sgr A*. Observations in
  August and September 2019 detected S29 easily, with K-magnitude of 16.6,
  at approximately 130 mas from Sgr A*. The planned upgrades of GRAVITY,
  and further improvements in the calibration, offer greater chances of
  finding stars fainter than K-magnitude of 19.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The ExoGRAVITY project: using single mode interferometry to
    characterize exoplanets
Authors: Lacour, S.; Wang, J. J.; Nowak, M.; Pueyo, L.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Mollière, P.; Abuter, R.; Amorin, A.;
   Asensio-Torres, R.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.; Berger, J. P.; Beust,
   H.; Blunt, S.; Boccaletti, A.; Bohn, A.; Bonnefoy, M.; Bonnet, H.;
   Brandner, W.; Cantalloube, F.; Caselli, P.; Charnay, B.; Chauvin, G.;
   Choquet, E.; Christiaens, V.; Clénet, Y.; Cridland, A.; de Zeeuw,
   P. T.; Dembet, R.; Dexter, J.; Drescher, A.; Duvert, G.; Gao, F.;
   Garcia, P.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Gardner, T.; Gendron, E.; Genzel, R.;
   Gillessen, S.; Girard, J. H.; Haubois, X.; Heißel, G.; Henning,
   T.; Hinkley, S.; Hippler, S.; Horrobin, M.; Houllé, M.; Hubert, Z.;
   Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Keppler, M.; Kervella,
   P.; Kreidberg, L.; Lapeyrère, V.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.;
   Lutz, D.; Maire, A. -L.; Mérand, A.; Monnier, J. D.; Mouillet, D.;
   Muller, A.; Nasedkin, E.; Ott, T.; Otten, G. P. P. L.; Paladini, C.;
   Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Pfuhl, O.; Rameau, J.; Rodet,
   L.; Rodriguez-Coira, G.; Rousset, G.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.;
   Stadler, J.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Stolker, T.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vigan, A.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S. D.;
   Ward-Duong, K.; Widmann, F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Woillez, J.
2020SPIE11446E..0OL    Altcode: 2021arXiv210107098L
  Combining adaptive optics and interferometric observations results in
  a considerable contrast gain compared to single-telescope, extreme AO
  systems. Taking advantage of this, the ExoGRAVITY project is a survey
  of known young giant exoplanets located in the range of 0.1" to 2" from
  their stars. The observations provide astrometric data of unprecedented
  accuracy, being crucial for refining the orbital parameters of planets
  and illuminating their dynamical histories. Furthermore, GRAVITY will
  measure non-Keplerian perturbations due to planet-planet interactions
  in multi-planet systems and measure dynamical masses. Over time,
  repetitive observations of the exoplanets at medium resolution (R = 500)
  will provide a catalogue of K-band spectra of unprecedented quality,
  for a number of exoplanets. The K-band has the unique properties
  that it contains many molecular signatures (CO, H<SUB>2</SUB>O,
  CH<SUB>4</SUB>, CO<SUB>2</SUB>). This allows constraining precisely
  surface gravity, metallicity, and temperature, if used in conjunction
  with self-consistent models like Exo-REM. Further, we will use the
  parameter-retrieval algorithm petitRADTRANS to constrain the C/O ratio
  of the planets. Ultimately, we plan to produce the first C/O survey of
  exoplanets, kick-starting the difficult process of linking planetary
  formation with measured atomic abundances.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: SUNRISE Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
for SUNRISE III: Scan mirror mechanism
Authors: Oba, Takayoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo,
   Masahito; Uraguchi, Fumihiro; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Tamura, Tomonori;
   Shinoda, Kazuya; Kodeki, Kazuhide; Fukushima, Kazuhiko; Gandorfer,
   Achim; del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos
2020SPIE11445E..4FO    Altcode:
  The SUNRISE Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is a
  balloon-borne long-slit spectrograph for SUNRISE III to precisely
  measure magnetic fields in the solar atmosphere. The scan mirror
  mechanism (SMM) is installed in the optical path to the entrance slit
  of the SCIP to move solar images focused on the slit for 2-dimensional
  mapping. The SMM is required to have (1) the tilt stability better
  than 0.035″ (3σ) on the sky angle for the diffraction-limited
  spatial resolution of 0.2″, (2) step response shorter than 32 msec
  for rapid scanning observations, and (3) good linearity (i.e. step
  uniformity) over the entire field-of-view (60″x60″). To achieve
  these performances, we have developed a flight-model mechanism
  and its electronics, in which the mirror tilt is controlled by
  electromagnetic actuators with a closed-loop feedback logic with
  tilt angles from gap-based capacitance sensors. Several optical
  measurements on the optical bench verified that the mechanism meets
  the requirements. In particular, the tilt stability achives better
  than 0.012″ (3σ). Thermal cycling and thermal vacuum tests have
  been completed to demonstrate the performance in the vacuum and the
  operational temperature range expected in the balloon flight. We
  found a small temperature dependence in the step uniformity and this
  dependence will be corrected to have 2-demensional maps with the
  sub-arcsec spatial accuracy in the data post-processing.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
for SUNRISE III: optical design and performance
Authors: Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Katsukawa, Yukio; Uraguchi, Fumihiro;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Kubo, Masahito; Nodomi, Yoshifumi; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Kawabata, Yusuke; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Gandorfer, Achim; Feller, Alex;
   Grauf, Bianca; Solanki, Sami; Carlos del Toro Iniesta, Jose
2020SPIE11447E..AJT    Altcode:
  The Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is a
  near-IR spectro-polarimeter instrument newly designed for Sunrise III,
  which is a balloon-borne solar observatory equipped with a 1 m optical
  telescope. To acquire high-quality 3D magnetic and velocity fields,
  SCIP selects the two wavelength bands centered at 850 nm and 770 nm,
  which contain many spectrum lines that are highly sensitive to magnetic
  fields permeating the photosphere and chromosphere. To achieve high
  spatial and spectral resolution (0.21 arcsec and 2 × 10<SUP>5</SUP>),
  SCIP optics adopt a quasi-Littrow configuration based on an echelle
  grating and two high-order aspheric mirrors. Using different diffraction
  orders of the echelle grating, dichroic beam splitter, and polarizing
  beam-splitters, SCIP can obtain s- and p-polarization signals in the
  two wavelength bands simultaneously within a relatively small space. We
  established the wavefront error budget based on tolerance analysis,
  surface figure errors, alignment errors, and environmental changes. In
  addition, we performed stray light analysis, and designed light traps
  and baffles needed to suppress unwanted reflections and diffraction
  by the grating. In this paper, we present the details of this optical
  system and its performance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
for SUNRISE III: polarization modulation unit
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio;
   Kawabata, Yusuke; Anan, Tetsu; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shinoda, Kazuya;
   Tamura, Tomonori; Nodomi, Yoshifumi; Nakayama, Satoshi; Yamada, Takuya;
   Tajima, Takao; Nakata, Shimpei; Nakajima, Yoshihito; Okutani, Kousei;
   Feller, Alex; del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos
2020SPIE11447E..A3K    Altcode:
  Polarization measurements of the solar chromospheric lines at
  high precision are key to present and future solar telescopes for
  understanding magnetic field structures in the chromosphere. The
  Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) for Sunrise
  III is a spectropolarimeter with a polarimetric precision of 0.03 %
  (1 σ). The key to high-precision polarization measurements using
  SCIP is a polarization modulation unit that rotates a waveplate
  continuously at a constant speed. The rotating mechanism is a DC
  brushless motor originally developed for a future space mission, and
  its control logic was originally developed for the sounding rocket
  experiment CLASP. Because of our requirement on a speed of rotation
  (0.512 s/rotation) that was 10 times faster than that of CLASP, we
  optimized the control logic for the required faster rotation. Fast
  polarization modulation is essential for investigating the fine-scale
  magnetic field structures related to the dynamical chromospheric
  phenomena. We have verified that the rotation performance can achieve
  the polarization precision of 0.03 % (1 σ) required by SCIP and such
  a significant rotation performance is maintained under thermal vacuum
  conditions by simulating the environment of the Sunrise III balloon
  flight. The waveplate was designed as a pair of two birefringent
  plates made of quartz and sapphire to achieve a constant retardation
  in a wide wavelength range. We have confirmed that the retardation
  is almost constant in the 770 nm and 850nm wavelength bands of SCIP
  under the operational temperature conditions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
for SUNRISE III: opto-mechanical analysis and design
Authors: Uraguchi, Fumihiro; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Katsukawa, Yukio;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Iwamura, Satoru; Kubo, Masahito; Nodomi, Yoshifumi;
   Suematsu, Yoshinori; Kawabata, Yusuke; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Gandorfer,
   Achim; del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos
2020SPIE11447E..ABU    Altcode:
  The Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is a
  near-IR spectro-polarimeter instrument newly designed for Sunrise III,
  a balloon-borne solar observatory with a 1-m diameter telescope. In
  order to achieve the strict requirements the SCIP wavefront error, it is
  necessary to quantify the errors due to environmen- tal effects such as
  gravity and temperature variation under the observation conditions. We
  therefore conducted an integrated opto-mechanical analysis incorporating
  mechanical and thermal disturbances into a finite element model of
  the entire SCIP structure to acquire the nodal displacements of each
  optical element, then fed them back to the optical analysis software
  in the form of rigid body motion and surface deformation fitted by
  polynomials. This method allowed us to determine the error factors
  having a significant influence on optical performance. For example,
  no significant wavefront degradation was associated with the structural
  mountings because the optical element mounts were well designed based
  on quasi-kinematic constraints. In contrast, we found that the main
  factor affecting wavefront degradation was the rigid body motions of
  the optical elements, which must be mini- mized within the allowable
  level. Based on these results, we constructed the optical bench using a
  sandwich panel as the optical bench consisting of an aluminum-honeycomb
  core and carbon fiber reinforced plastic skins with a high stiffness
  and low coefficient of thermal expansion. We then confirmed that the
  new opto-mechanical model achieved the wavefront error requirement. In
  this paper, we report the details of this integrated opto-mechanical
  analysis, including the wavefront error budgeting and the design of
  the opto-mechanics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Significant Suppression of Star Formation in Radio-quiet AGN
    Host Galaxies with Kiloparsec-scale Radio Structures
Authors: Smith, Krista Lynne; Koss, Michael; Mushotzky, Richard;
   Wong, O. Ivy; Shimizu, T. Taro; Ricci, Claudio; Ricci, Federica
2020ApJ...904...83S    Altcode: 2020arXiv201013806S
  We conducted 22 GHz 1″ Jansky Very Large Array imaging of 100
  radio-quiet X-ray-selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the
  Swift-Burst Array Telescope (Swift-BAT) survey. We find AGN-driven
  kiloparsec-scale radio structures inconsistent with pure star formation
  in 11 AGN. The host galaxies of these AGN lie significantly below the
  star-forming main sequence, indicating suppressed star formation. While
  these radio structures tend to be physically small compared to the host
  galaxy, the global star formation rate of the host is affected. We
  evaluate the energetics of the radio structures interpreted first
  as immature radio jets, and then as consequences of an AGN-driven
  radiative outflow, and compare them to two criteria for successful
  feedback: the ability to remove the CO-derived molecular gas mass from
  the galaxy gravitational potential and the kinetic energy transfer to
  molecular clouds leading to v<SUB>cloud</SUB> &gt; σ<SUB>*</SUB>. In
  most cases, the jet interpretation is insufficient to provide the energy
  necessary to cause the star formation suppression. Conversely, the wind
  interpretation provides ample energy in all but one case. We conclude
  that it is more likely that the observed suppression of star formation
  in the global host galaxy is due to interstellar medium interactions
  of a radiative outflow, rather than a small-scale radio jet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Determining Subparsec Supermassive Black Hole Binary Orbits
    with Infrared Interferometry
Authors: Dexter, Jason; Lutz, Dieter; Shimizu, T. Taro; Shangguan,
   Jinyi; Davies, Richard I.; de Zeeuw, P. Tim; Sturm, Eckhard;
   Eisenhauer, Frank; Förster-Schreiber, Natascha M.; Gao, Feng;
   Genzel, Reinhard; Gillessen, Stefan; Pfuhl, Oliver; Tacconi, Linda J.;
   Widmann, Felix
2020ApJ...905...33D    Altcode: 2020arXiv201009735D
  Radial-velocity monitoring has revealed the presence of moving
  broad emission lines in some quasars, potentially indicating the
  presence of a subparsec binary system. Phase-referenced, near-infrared
  interferometric observations could map out the binary orbit by measuring
  the photocenter difference between a broad emission line and the
  hot dust continuum. We show that astrometric data over several years
  may be able to detect proper motions and accelerations, confirming
  the presence of a binary and constraining system parameters. The
  brightness, redshifts, and astrometric sizes of current candidates are
  well matched to the capabilities of the upgraded Very Large Telescope
  Interferometer/GRAVITY+ instrument, and we identify a first sample
  of 10 possible candidates. The astrometric signature depends on the
  morphology and evolution of hot dust emission in supermassive black
  hole binary systems. Measurements of the photocenter offset may reveal
  binary motion whether the hot dust emission region is fixed to the
  inner edge of the circumbinary disk, or moves in response to the
  changing irradiation pattern from an accreting secondary black hole.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar-C (EUVST) mission: the latest status
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke; Kawate, Tomoko; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Hara, Hirohisa; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo,
   Masahito; Ishikawa, Ryoko; Watanabe, Tetsuya; Toriumi, Shin; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Hasegawa, Takahiro; Yokoyama, Takaaki;
   Watanabe, Kyoko; Tsuno, Katsuhiko; Korendyke, Clarence M.; Warren,
   Harry; De Pontieu, Bart; Boerner, Paul; Solanki, Sami K.; Teriaca,
   Luca; Schuehle, Udo; Matthews, Sarah; Long, David; Thomas, William;
   Hancock, Barry; Reid, Hamish; Fludra, Andrzej; Auchère, Frederic;
   Andretta, Vincenzo; Naletto, Giampiero; Poletto, Luca; Harra, Louise
2020SPIE11444E..0NS    Altcode:
  Solar-C (EUVST) is the next Japanese solar physics mission to
  be developed with significant contributions from US and European
  countries. The mission carries an EUV imaging spectrometer with
  slit-jaw imaging system called EUVST (EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic
  Telescope) as the mission payload, to take a fundamental step towards
  answering how the plasma universe is created and evolves and how the
  Sun influences the Earth and other planets in our solar system. In
  April 2020, ISAS (Institute of Space and Astronautical Science) of JAXA
  (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) has made the final down-selection
  for this mission as the 4th in the series of competitively chosen
  M-class mission to be launched with an Epsilon launch vehicle in mid
  2020s. NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) has selected
  this mission concept for Phase A concept study in September 2019 and
  is in the process leading to final selection. For European countries,
  the team has (or is in the process of confirming) confirmed endorsement
  for hardware contributions to the EUVST from the national agencies. A
  recent update to the mission instrumentation is to add a UV spectral
  irradiance monitor capability for EUVST calibration and scientific
  purpose. This presentation provides the latest status of the mission
  with an overall description of the mission concept emphasizing on key
  roles of the mission in heliophysics research from mid 2020s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared SpectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
for sunrise III: system design and capability
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; del Toro Iniesta, J. C.; Solanki, S. K.;
   Kubo, M.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.; Oba, T.; Kawabata, Y.; Tsuzuki,
   T.; Uraguchi, F.; Nodomi, Y.; Shinoda, K.; Tamura, T.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Ishikawa, R.; Kano, R.; Matsumoto, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Nagata, S.;
   Quintero Noda, C.; Anan, T.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Balaguer Jiménez,
   M.; López Jiménez, A. C.; Cobos Carrascosa, J. P.; Feller, A.;
   Riethmueller, T.; Gandorfer, A.; Lagg, A.
2020SPIE11447E..0YK    Altcode:
  The Sunrise balloon-borne solar observatory carries a 1 m aperture
  optical telescope and provides us a unique platform to conduct
  continuous seeing-free observations at UV-visible-IR wavelengths from
  an altitude of higher than 35 km. For the next flight planned for
  2022, the post-focus instrumentation is upgraded with new spectro-
  polarimeters for the near UV (SUSI) and the near-IR (SCIP), whereas
  the imaging spectro-polarimeter Tunable Magnetograph (TuMag) is capable
  of observing multiple spectral lines within the visible wavelength. A
  new spectro-polarimeter called the Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared
  spectroPolarimeter (SCIP) is under development for observing near-IR
  wavelength ranges of around 770 nm and 850 nm. These wavelength ranges
  contain many spectral lines sensitive to solar magnetic fields and
  SCIP will be able to obtain magnetic and velocity structures in the
  solar atmosphere with a sufficient height resolution by combining
  spectro-polarimetric data of these lines. Polarimetric measurements are
  conducted using a rotating waveplate as a modulator and polarizing beam
  splitters in front of the cameras. The spatial and spectral resolutions
  are 0.2" and 2 105, respectively, and a polarimetric sensitivity of
  0.03 % (1σ) is achieved within a 10 s integration time. To detect
  minute polarization signals with good precision, we carefully designed
  the opto-mechanical system, polarization optics and modulation, and
  onboard data processing.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Current Status of the Solar-C_EUVST Mission
Authors: Imada, S.; Shimizu, T.; Kawate, T.; Toriumi, S.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Kubo, M.; Hara, H.; Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Watanabe, T.;
   Watanabe, K.; Yokoyama, T.; Warren, H.; Long, D.; Harra, L. K.;
   Teriaca, L.
2020AGUFMSH056..05I    Altcode:
  Solar-C_EUVST (EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope) is designed
  to comprehensively understand the energy and mass transfer from the
  solar surface to the solar corona and interplanetary space, and to
  investigate the elementary processes that take place universally
  in cosmic plasmas. As a fundamental step towards answering how the
  plasma universe is created and evolves, and how the Sun influences
  the Earth and other planets in our solar system, the proposed mission
  is designed to comprehensively understand how mass and energy are
  transferred throughout the solar atmosphere. Understanding the solar
  atmosphere, which connects to the heliosphere via radiation, the solar
  wind and coronal mass ejections, and energetic particles is pivotal
  for establishing the conditions for life and habitability in the solar
  system. <P />The two primary science objectives for Solar-C_EUVST are :
  I) Understand how fundamental processes lead to the formation of the
  solar atmosphere and the solar wind, II) Understand how the solar
  atmosphere becomes unstable, releasing the energy that drives solar
  flares and eruptions. Solar-C_EUVST will, A) seamlessly observe all
  the temperature regimes of the solar atmosphere from the chromosphere
  to the corona at the same time, B) resolve elemental structures of the
  solar atmosphere with high spatial resolution and cadence to track their
  evolution, and C) obtain spectroscopic information on the dynamics of
  elementary processes taking place in the solar atmosphere. <P />In this
  talk, we will first discuss the science target of the Solar-C_EUVST,
  and then discuss the current status of the Solar-C_EUVST mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Thermal design of the Solar-C (EUVST) telescope
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hara, Hirohisa;
   Kawate, Tomoko; Katsukawa, Yukio; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Imada, Shinsuke;
   Nagae, Kazuhiro; Yamazaki, Atsumu; Hattori, Tomoya
2020SPIE11444E..3KS    Altcode:
  The EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope (EUVST) of Solar-C
  mission consists of only two imaging optical components; a 28-cm clear
  aperture off-axis parabolic primary mirror and a two-split ellipsoidal
  grating without a blocking filter for visible light before the primary
  mirror to achieve unprecedented high spatial and temporal resolution in
  EUV-UV imaging spectroscopic observations. For this reason, about 60
  W of sunlight is absorbed by the multilayer coating on the mirror. We
  report a thermal design of telescope in which the temperature of the
  primary mirror bonding part and underlying tip-tilt and slit-scanning
  mechanisms is well lower than a glass transition temperature of adhesive
  (about 60°C) and thermal deformation of the primary mirror is small,
  although it is non-negligibly small.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A sensitivity analysis of the updated optical design for
    EUVST on the Solar-C mission
Authors: Kawate, Tomoko; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Imada, Shinsuke; Katsukawa, Yukio; Hara, Hirohisa; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Hattori, Tomoya; Narasaki, Shota; Warren, Harry P.;
   Teriaca, Luca; Korendyke, Clarence M.; Brown, Charles M.; Auchere,
   Frederic
2020SPIE11444E..3JK    Altcode:
  The EUV high-throughput spectroscopic telescope (EUVST) onboard the
  Solar-C mission has the high spatial (0.4”) resolution over a wide
  wavelength range in the vacuum ultraviolet. To achieve high spatial
  resolution under a design constraint given by the JAXA Epsilon launch
  vehicle, we further update the optical design to secure margins
  needed to realize 0.4” spatial resolution over a field of view of
  100”×100”. To estimate the error budgets of spatial and spectral
  resolutions due to installation and fabrication errors, we perform a
  sensitivity analysis for the position and orientation of each optical
  element and for the grating parameters by ray tracing with the Zemax
  software. We obtain point spread functions (PSF) for rays from 9
  fields and at 9 wavelengths on each detector by changing each parameter
  slightly. A full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the PSF is derived at
  each field and wavelength position as a function of the perturbation
  of each optical parameter. Assuming a mount system of each optical
  element and an error of each optical parameter, we estimate spatial
  and spectral resolutions by taking installation and fabrication errors
  into account. The results of the sensitivity analysis suggest that
  budgets of the total of optical design and the assembly errors account
  for 15% and 5.8% of our budgets of the spatial resolution in the long
  wavelength and short wavelength bands, respectively. On the other hand,
  the grating fabrication errors give a large degradation of spatial and
  spectral resolutions, and investigations of compensators are needed
  to relax the fabrication tolerance of the grating surface parameters.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The spatially resolved broad line region of IRAS 09149-6206
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Brandner,
   W.; Clénet, Y.; Davies, R.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Dexter, J.; Eckart, A.;
   Eisenhauer, F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Gratadour, D.; Hönig, S.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Lacour, S.; Lutz, D.; Millour, F.; Netzer, H.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.;
   Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. O.; Pfuhl,
   O.; Prieto, M. A.; Rouan, D.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.; Schartmann,
   M.; Stadler, J.; Sternberg, A.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm,
   E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Vermot, P.; von Fellenberg,
   S.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2020A&A...643A.154G    Altcode: 2020arXiv200908463G
  We present new near-infrared VLTI/GRAVITY interferometric spectra that
  spatially resolve the broad Brγ emission line in the nucleus of the
  active galaxy IRAS 09149-6206. We use these data to measure the size
  of the broad line region (BLR) and estimate the mass of the central
  black hole. Using an improved phase calibration method that reduces
  the differential phase uncertainty to 0.05° per baseline across the
  spectrum, we detect a differential phase signal that reaches a maximum
  of ∼0.5° between the line and continuum. This represents an offset
  of ∼120 μas (0.14 pc) between the BLR and the centroid of the hot
  dust distribution traced by the 2.3 μm continuum. The offset is well
  within the dust sublimation region, which matches the measured ∼0.6
  mas (0.7 pc) diameter of the continuum. A clear velocity gradient,
  almost perpendicular to the offset, is traced by the reconstructed
  photocentres of the spectral channels of the Brγ line. We infer the
  radius of the BLR to be ∼65 μas (0.075 pc), which is consistent
  with the radius-luminosity relation of nearby active galactic nuclei
  derived based on the time lag of the Hβ line from reverberation mapping
  campaigns. Our dynamical modelling indicates the black hole mass is
  ∼1 × 10<SUP>8</SUP> M<SUB>⊙</SUB>, which is a little below, but
  consistent with, the standard M<SUB>BH</SUB>-σ<SUB>*</SUB> relation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionized outflows in local luminous AGN: what are the real
    densities and outflow rates?
Authors: Davies, R.; Baron, D.; Shimizu, T.; Netzer, H.; Burtscher, L.;
   de Zeeuw, P. T.; Genzel, R.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Koss, M.; Lin, M. -Y.;
   Lutz, D.; Maciejewski, W.; Müller-Sánchez, F.; Orban de Xivry,
   G.; Ricci, C.; Riffel, R.; Riffel, R. A.; Rosario, D.; Schartmann,
   M.; Schnorr-Müller, A.; Shangguan, J.; Sternberg, A.; Sturm, E.;
   Storchi-Bergmann, T.; Tacconi, L.; Veilleux, S.
2020MNRAS.498.4150D    Altcode: 2020arXiv200306153D; 2020MNRAS.tmp.2061D
  We report on the determination of electron densities, and their impact
  on the outflow masses and rates, measured in the central few hundred
  parsecs of 11 local luminous active galaxies. We show that the peak
  of the integrated line emission in the active galactic nuclei (AGN)
  is significantly offset from the systemic velocity as traced by the
  stellar absorption features, indicating that the profiles are dominated
  by outflow. In contrast, matched inactive galaxies are characterized by
  a systemic peak and weaker outflow wing. We present three independent
  estimates of the electron density in these AGN, discussing the merits
  of the different methods. The electron density derived from the [S II]
  doublet is significantly lower than that found with a method developed
  in the last decade using auroral and transauroral lines, as well as
  a recently introduced method based on the ionization parameter. The
  reason is that, for gas photoionized by an AGN, much of the [S II]
  emission arises in an extended partially ionized zone where the
  implicit assumption that the electron density traces the hydrogen
  density is invalid. We propose ways to deal with this situation and we
  derive the associated outflow rates for ionized gas, which are in the
  range 0.001-0.5 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP> for our AGN sample. We
  compare these outflow rates to the relation between $\dot{M}_{\rm out}$
  and L<SUB>AGN</SUB> in the literature, and argue that it may need to
  be modified and rescaled towards lower mass outflow rates.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rotation Curves in z ∼ 1-2 Star-forming Disks: Evidence
    for Cored Dark Matter Distributions
Authors: Genzel, R.; Price, S. H.; Übler, H.; Förster Schreiber,
   N. M.; Shimizu, T. T.; Tacconi, L. J.; Bender, R.; Burkert, A.;
   Contursi, A.; Coogan, R.; Davies, R. L.; Davies, R. I.; Dekel, A.;
   Herrera-Camus, R.; Lee, M. -J.; Lutz, D.; Naab, T.; Neri, R.; Nestor,
   A.; Renzini, A.; Saglia, R.; Schuster, K.; Sternberg, A.; Wisnioski,
   E.; Wuyts, S.
2020ApJ...902...98G    Altcode: 2020arXiv200603046G
  We report high-quality, Hα or CO rotation curves (RCs) to several
  R<SUB>e</SUB> for 41 large, massive, star-forming disk galaxies
  (SFGs) across the peak of cosmic galaxy evolution (z ∼ 0.67-2.45),
  taken with the ESO-VLT, the LBT and IRAM-NOEMA. Most RC41 SFGs have
  reflection-symmetric RCs plausibly described by equilibrium dynamics. We
  fit the major axis position-velocity cuts using beam-convolved
  forward modeling generated in three dimensions, with models that
  include a bulge and turbulent disk component embedded in a dark matter
  (DM) halo. We include priors for stellar and molecular gas masses,
  optical light effective radii and inclinations, and DM masses from
  abundance-matching scaling relations. Two-thirds or more of the z ≥
  1.2 SFGs are baryon dominated within a few R<SUB>e</SUB> of typically
  5.5 kpc and have DM fractions less than maximal disks (median $\langle
  {f}_{\mathrm{DM}}({R}_{e})\rangle =0.12$ ). At lower redshift (z &lt;
  1.2), that fraction is less than one-third. DM fractions correlate
  inversely with the baryonic angular momentum parameter, baryonic surface
  density, and bulge mass. Inferred low DM fractions cannot apply to
  the entire disk and halo but more plausibly reflect a flattened, or
  cored, inner DM density distribution. The typical central "DM deficit"
  in these cores relative to Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW) distributions is
  ∼30% of the bulge mass. The observations are consistent with rapid
  radial transport of baryons in the first-generation massive gas-rich
  halos forming globally gravitationally unstable disks and leading
  to efficient build-up of massive bulges and central black holes. A
  combination of heating due to dynamical friction and AGN feedback may
  drive DM out of the initial cusps.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Formation of Lyman β and the O I 1027 and 1028 Å
    Spectral Lines
Authors: Hasegawa, Takahiro; Noda, Carlos Quintero; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Carlsson, Mats
2020ApJ...900...34H    Altcode: 2020arXiv200812556H
  We study the potential of Lyman β and the O I 1027 and 1028
  Å spectral lines to help in understanding the properties of the
  chromosphere and transition region (TR). The oxygen transitions are
  located in the wing of Lyman β, which is a candidate spectral line
  for the solar missions Solar Orbiter/Spectral Imaging of the Coronal
  Environment and Solar-C (EUVST). We examine the general spectroscopic
  properties of the three transitions in the quiet Sun by synthesizing
  them assuming nonlocal thermal equilibrium and taking into account
  partial redistribution effects. We estimate the heights where the
  spectral lines are sensitive to the physical parameters, computing the
  response functions to temperature and velocity using a 1D semiempirical
  atmospheric model. We also synthesize the intensity spectrum using the
  3D enhanced network simulation computed with the BIFROST code. The
  results indicate that Lyman β is sensitive to the temperature from
  the middle chromosphere to the TR, while it is mainly sensitive to
  the line-of-sight (LOS) velocity at the lower atmospheric layers,
  around 2000 km above the optical surface. The O I lines form lower
  in the middle chromosphere, being sensitive to the LOS velocities at
  heights lower than those covered by Lyman β. The spatial distribution
  of the intensity signals computed with the BIFROST atmosphere, as
  well as the inferred velocities from the line core Doppler shift,
  confirms the previous results. Therefore, these results indicate that
  the spectral window at 1025 Å contains several spectral lines that
  complement each other to seamlessly trace the thermal structure and
  gas dynamics from the middle chromosphere to the lower TR.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Magnetic Field: A Comparison of He I 10830 Å
    Observations with Nonlinear Force-free Field Extrapolation
Authors: Kawabata, Yusuke; Asensio Ramos, Andrés; Inoue, Satoshi;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi
2020ApJ...898...32K    Altcode: 2020arXiv200600179K
  The nonlinear force-free field (NLFFF) modeling has been extensively
  used to infer the three-dimensional magnetic field in the solar
  corona. One of the assumptions in the NLFFF extrapolation is that the
  plasma beta is low, but this condition is considered to be incorrect in
  the photosphere. We examine direct measurements of the chromospheric
  magnetic field in two active regions through spectropolarimetric
  observations at He I 10830 Å, which are compared with the potential
  fields and NLFFFs extrapolated from the photosphere. The comparisons
  allow quantitative estimation of the uncertainty in the NLFFF
  extrapolation from the photosphere. Our analysis shows that observed
  chromospheric magnetic field may have larger nonpotentiality compared to
  the photospheric magnetic field. Moreover, the large nonpotentiality
  in the chromospheric height may not be reproduced by the NLFFF
  extrapolation from the photospheric magnetic field. The magnitude of
  the underestimation of the nonpotentiality at chromospheric heights may
  reach 30°-40° in shear signed angle in some locations. This deviation
  may be caused by the non-force-freeness in the photosphere. Our study
  suggests the importance of the inclusion of measured chromospheric
  magnetic fields in the NLFFF modeling for the improvement of the
  coronal extrapolation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey. XVIII. Searching for
    Supermassive Black Hole Binaries in X-Rays
Authors: Liu, Tingting; Koss, Michael; Blecha, Laura; Ricci, Claudio;
   Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Mushotzky, Richard; Harrison, Fiona; Ichikawa,
   Kohei; Kakkad, Darshan; Oh, Kyuseok; Powell, Meredith; Privon, George
   C.; Schawinski, Kevin; Shimizu, T. Taro; Smith, Krista Lynne; Stern,
   Daniel; Treister, Ezequiel; Urry, C. Megan
2020ApJ...896..122L    Altcode: 2019arXiv191202837L
  Theory predicts that a supermassive black hole binary (SMBHB) could be
  observed as a luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN) that periodically
  varies on the order of its orbital timescale. In X-rays, periodic
  variations could be caused by mechanisms including relativistic Doppler
  boosting and shocks. Here we present the first systematic search for
  periodic AGNs using 941 hard X-ray light curves (14-195 keV) from
  the first 105 months of the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) survey
  (2004-2013). We do not find evidence for periodic AGNs in Swift-BAT,
  including the previously reported SMBHB candidate MCG+11-11-032. We
  find that the null detection is consistent with the combination
  of the upper-limit binary population in AGNs in our adopted model,
  their expected periodic variability amplitudes, and the BAT survey
  characteristics. We have also investigated the detectability of
  SMBHBs against normal AGN X-ray variability in the context of the
  extended ROentgen Survey with an Imaging Telescope Array (eROSITA)
  survey. Under our assumptions of a binary population and the periodic
  signals they produce, which have long periods of hundreds of days,
  up to 13% true periodic binaries can be robustly distinguished from
  normal variable AGNs with the ideal uniform sampling. However,
  we demonstrate that realistic eROSITA sampling is likely to be
  insensitive to long-period binaries because longer observing gaps
  reduce their detectability. In contrast, large observing gaps do not
  diminish the prospect of detecting binaries of short, few-day periods,
  as 19% can be successfully recovered, the vast majority of which can
  be identified by the first half of the survey.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Extrapolation of Three-dimensional Magnetic Field Structure
    in Flare-productive Active Regions with Different Initial Conditions
Authors: Kawabata, Y.; Inoue, S.; Shimizu, T.
2020ApJ...895..105K    Altcode: 2020arXiv200500177K
  Nonlinear force-free field (NLFFF) modeling has been extensively used
  as a tool to infer three-dimensional (3D) magnetic field structure. In
  this study, the dependency of the NLFFF calculation with respect to
  the initial guess of the 3D magnetic field is investigated. While
  major parts of the previous studies used the potential field as the
  initial guess in NLFFF modeling, we adopt linear force-free fields
  with different constant force-free alpha as the initial guesses. This
  method enables us to investigate the uniqueness of the magnetic
  field obtained by the NLFFF extrapolation with respect to the initial
  guess. The dependence of the initial conditions on NLFFF extrapolation
  is smaller in the strong magnetic field region. Therefore, the magnetic
  field at lower heights (&lt;10 Mm) tends to be less affected by the
  initial conditions (correlation coefficient C &gt; 0.9 with different
  initial conditions); although, the Lorentz force is concentrated at
  lower heights.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Solar Magnetic-fan Flaring Arch Heated by Nonthermal
    Particles and Hot Plasma from an X-Ray Jet Eruption
Authors: Lee, Kyoung-Sun; Hara, Hirohisa; Watanabe, Kyoko; Joshi,
   Anand D.; Brooks, David H.; Imada, Shinsuke; Prasad, Avijeet; Dang,
   Phillip; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Savage, Sabrina L.; Moore, Ronald;
   Panesar, Navdeep K.; Reep, Jeffrey W.
2020ApJ...895...42L    Altcode: 2020arXiv200509875L
  We have investigated an M1.3 limb flare, which develops as a magnetic
  loop/arch that fans out from an X-ray jet. Using Hinode/EIS, we
  found that the temperature increases with height to a value of over
  10<SUP>7</SUP> K at the loop top during the flare. The measured Doppler
  velocity (redshifts of 100-500 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) and the nonthermal
  velocity (≥100 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) from Fe XXIV also increase with
  loop height. The electron density increases from 0.3 × 10<SUP>9</SUP>
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> early in the flare rise to 1.3 × 10<SUP>9</SUP>
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> after the flare peak. The 3D structure of the loop
  derived with Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory/EUV Imager
  indicates that the strong redshift in the loop-top region is due to
  upflowing plasma originating from the jet. Both hard X-ray and soft
  X-ray emission from the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic
  Imager were only seen as footpoint brightenings during the impulsive
  phase of the flare, then, soft X-ray emission moved to the loop top in
  the decay phase. Based on the temperature and density measurements and
  theoretical cooling models, the temperature evolution of the flare arch
  is consistent with impulsive heating during the jet eruption followed
  by conductive cooling via evaporation and minor prolonged heating in
  the top of the fan loop. Investigating the magnetic field topology and
  squashing factor map from Solar Dynamics Observatory/HMI, we conclude
  that the observed magnetic-fan flaring arch is mostly heated from low
  atmospheric reconnection accompanying the jet ejection, instead of from
  reconnection above the arch as expected in the standard flare model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: From Nuclear to Circumgalactic: Zooming in on AGN-driven
    Outflows at z ∼ 2.2 with SINFONI
Authors: Davies, Rebecca L.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Lutz, D.;
   Genzel, R.; Belli, S.; Shimizu, T. T.; Contursi, A.; Davies, R. I.;
   Herrera-Camus, R.; Lee, M. M.; Naab, T.; Price, S. H.; Renzini, A.;
   Schruba, A.; Sternberg, A.; Tacconi, L. J.; Übler, H.; Wisnioski,
   E.; Wuyts, S.
2020ApJ...894...28D    Altcode: 2020arXiv200402891D
  We use deep adaptive optics assisted integral field spectroscopy from
  SINFONI on the VLT to study the spatially resolved properties of ionized
  gas outflows driven by active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in three galaxies
  at z ∼ 2.2—K20-ID5, COS4-11337, and J0901 + 1814. These systems
  probe AGN feedback from nuclear to circumgalactic scales and provide
  unique insights into the different mechanisms by which AGN-driven
  outflows interact with their host galaxies. K20-ID5 and COS4-11337 are
  compact star-forming galaxies with powerful ∼1500 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  AGN-driven outflows that dominate their nuclear Hα emission. The
  outflows do not appear to have any impact on the instantaneous star
  formation activity of the host galaxies, but they carry a significant
  amount of kinetic energy that could heat the halo gas and potentially
  lead to a reduction in the rate of cold gas accretion onto the
  galaxies. The outflow from COS4-11337 is propagating directly toward
  its companion galaxy COS4-11363, at a projected separation of 5.4
  kpc. COS4-11363 shows signs of shock excitation and recent truncation
  of star formation activity, which could plausibly have been induced by
  the outflow from COS4-11337. J0901 + 1814 is gravitationally lensed,
  giving us a unique view of a compact (R = 470 ± 70 pc), relatively
  low-velocity (∼650 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) AGN-driven outflow. J0901 +
  1814 has a similar AGN luminosity to COS4-11337, suggesting that the
  difference in outflow properties is not related to the current AGN
  luminosity and may instead reflect a difference in the evolutionary
  stage of the outflow and/or the coupling efficiency between the AGN
  ionizing radiation field and the gas in the nuclear regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: AGN feedback in a galaxy merger: multi-phase, galaxy-scale
    outflows with a fast molecular gas blob ∼6 kpc away from IRAS
    F08572+3915
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Janssen, A.; Sturm, E.; Lutz, D.; Veilleux,
   S.; Davies, R.; Shimizu, T.; González-Alfonso, E.; Rupke, D. S. N.;
   Tacconi, L.; Genzel, R.; Cicone, C.; Maiolino, R.; Contursi, A.;
   Graciá-Carpio, J.
2020A&A...635A..47H    Altcode: 2019arXiv191106326H
  To understand the role that active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback
  plays in galaxy evolution, we need in-depth studies of the multi-phase
  structure and energetics of galaxy-wide outflows. In this work,
  we present new, deep (∼50 h) NOEMA CO(1-0) line observations of
  the molecular gas in the powerful outflow driven by the AGN in the
  ultra-luminous infrared galaxy IRAS F08572+3915. We spatially resolve
  the outflow, finding that its most likely configuration is a wide-angle
  bicone aligned with the kinematic major axis of the rotation disk. The
  molecular gas in the wind reaches velocities up to approximately ±1200
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP> and transports nearly 20% of the molecular gas mass
  in the system. We detect a second outflow component located ∼6 kpc
  northwest from the galaxy moving away at ∼900 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>,
  which could be the result of a previous episode of AGN activity. The
  total mass and energetics of the outflow, which includes contributions
  from the ionized, neutral, and warm and cold molecular gas phases, is
  strongly dominated by the cold molecular gas. In fact, the molecular
  mass outflow rate is higher than the star formation rate, even if we
  only consider the gas in the outflow that is fast enough to escape the
  galaxy, which accounts for ∼40% of the total mass of the outflow. This
  results in an outflow depletion time for the molecular gas in the
  central ∼1.5 kpc region of only ∼3 Myr, a factor of ∼2 shorter
  than the depletion time by star formation activity. <P />A copy of
  the reduced datacube is available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr</A>
  (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/635/A47">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/635/A47</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The resolved size and structure of hot dust in the immediate
    vicinity of AGN
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Dexter, J.; Shangguan, J.; Hönig,
   S.; Kishimoto, M.; Lutz, D.; Netzer, H.; Davies, R.; Sturm, E.;
   Pfuhl, O.; Amorim, A.; Bauböck, M.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; de
   Zeeuw, P. T.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Genzel, R.; Gillessen, S.; Gratadour, D.;
   Jiménez-Rosales, A.; Lacour, S.; Millour, F.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.;
   Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. O.; Prieto,
   M. A.; Rouan, D.; Schartmann, M.; Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.;
   Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram, K.; Vermot,
   P.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2020A&A...635A..92G    Altcode: 2019arXiv191000593G; 2020A&A...635A..92.
  We use VLTI/GRAVITY near-infrared interferometry measurements of eight
  bright type 1 AGN to study the size and structure of hot dust that
  is heated by the central engine. We partially resolve each source,
  and report Gaussian full width at half-maximum sizes in the range
  0.3-0.8 mas. In all but one object, we find no evidence for significant
  elongation or asymmetry (closure phases ≲1°). The narrow range
  of measured angular sizes is expected given the similar optical flux
  of our targets, and implies an increasing effective physical radius
  with bolometric luminosity, as found from previous reverberation and
  interferometry measurements. The measured sizes for Seyfert galaxies
  are systematically larger than for the two quasars in our sample when
  measured relative to the previously reported R ∼ L<SUP>1/2</SUP>
  relationship, which is explained by emission at the sublimation
  radius. This could be evidence of an evolving near-infrared emission
  region structure as a function of central luminosity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The CO(3-2)/CO(1-0) Luminosity Line Ratio in Nearby
    Star-forming Galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei from xCOLD GASS,
    BASS, and SLUGS
Authors: Lamperti, Isabella; Saintonge, Amélie; Koss, Michael;
   Viti, Serena; Wilson, Christine D.; He, Hao; Shimizu, T. Taro; Greve,
   Thomas R.; Mushotzky, Richard; Treister, Ezequiel; Kramer, Carsten;
   Sanders, David; Schawinski, Kevin; Tacconi, Linda J.
2020ApJ...889..103L    Altcode: 2019arXiv191201026L
  We study the ${r}_{31}={L}_{\mathrm{CO}(3\mbox{--}2)}^{{\prime}
  }/{L}_{\mathrm{CO}(1\mbox{--}0)}^{{\prime} }$ luminosity line ratio in
  a sample of nearby (z &lt; 0.05) galaxies: 25 star-forming galaxies
  (SFGs) from the xCOLD GASS survey, 36 hard X-ray-selected active
  galactic nucleus (AGN) host galaxies from the BAT AGN Spectroscopic
  Survey, and 37 infrared-luminous galaxies from the SCUBA Local Universe
  Galaxy Survey. We find a trend for r<SUB>31</SUB> to increase with star
  formation efficiency (SFE). We model r<SUB>31</SUB> using the UCL-PDR
  code and find that the gas density is the main parameter responsible for
  the variation of r<SUB>31</SUB>, while the interstellar radiation field
  and cosmic-ray ionization rate play only a minor role. We interpret
  these results to indicate a relation between SFE and gas density. We do
  not find a difference in the r<SUB>31</SUB> value of SFGs and AGN host
  galaxies, when the galaxies are matched in SSFR (&lt;r<SUB>31</SUB>&gt;
  = 0.52 ± 0.04 for SFGs and &lt;r<SUB>31</SUB>&gt; = 0.53 ± 0.06
  for AGN hosts). According to the results of the UCL-PDR models, the
  X-rays can contribute to the enhancement of the CO line ratio, but
  only for strong X-ray fluxes and for high gas density (n<SUB>H</SUB>
  &gt; 10<SUP>4</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>). We find a mild tightening of the
  Kennicutt-Schmidt relation when we use the molecular gas mass surface
  density traced by CO(3-2) (Pearson correlation coefficient R = 0.83),
  instead of the molecular gas mass surface density traced by CO(1-0) (R =
  0.78), but the increase in correlation is not statistically significant
  (p-value = 0.06). This suggests that the CO(3-2) line can be reliably
  used to study the relation between SFR and molecular gas for normal
  SFGs at high redshift and to compare it with studies of low-redshift
  galaxies, as is common practice.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LLAMA: The M<SUB>BH</SUB>-σ<SUB>⋆</SUB> relation of the
    most luminous local AGNs
Authors: Caglar, Turgay; Burtscher, Leonard; Brandl, Bernhard;
   Brinchmann, Jarle; Davies, Richard I.; Hicks, Erin K. S.; Koss,
   Michael; Lin, Ming-Yi; Maciejewski, Witold; Müller-Sánchez,
   Francisco; Riffel, Rogemar A.; Riffel, Rogério; Rosario, David
   J.; Schartmann, Marc; Schnorr-Müller, Allan; Shimizu, T. Taro;
   Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa; Veilleux, Sylvain; Orban de Xivry, Gilles;
   Bennert, Vardha N.
2020A&A...634A.114C    Altcode: 2019arXiv191207734C
  Context. The M<SUB>BH</SUB>-σ<SUB>⋆</SUB> relation is considered a
  result of coevolution between the host galaxies and their supermassive
  black holes. For elliptical bulge hosting inactive galaxies, this
  relation is well established, but there is still discussion concerning
  whether active galaxies follow the same relation. <BR /> Aims: In
  this paper, we estimate black hole masses for a sample of 19 local
  luminous active galactic nuclei (AGNs; LLAMA) to test their location
  on the M<SUB>BH</SUB>-σ<SUB>⋆</SUB> relation. In addition, we test
  how robustly we can determine the stellar velocity dispersion in the
  presence of an AGN continuum and AGN emission lines, and as a function
  of signal-to-noise ratio. <BR /> Methods: Supermassive black hole masses
  (M<SUB>BH</SUB>) were derived from the broad-line-based relations
  for Hα, Hβ, and Paβ emission line profiles for Type 1 AGNs. We
  compared the bulge stellar velocity dispersion (σ<SUB>⋆</SUB>)
  as determined from the Ca II triplet (CaT) with the dispersion
  measured from the near-infrared CO (2-0) absorption features for
  each AGN and find them to be consistent with each other. We applied
  an extinction correction to the observed broad-line fluxes and we
  corrected the stellar velocity dispersion by an average rotation
  contribution as determined from spatially resolved stellar kinematic
  maps. <BR /> Results: The Hα-based black hole masses of our sample
  of AGNs were estimated in the range 6.34 ≤ log M<SUB>BH</SUB>
  ≤ 7.75 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> and the σ<SUB>⋆CaT</SUB> estimates range
  between 73 ≤ σ<SUB>⋆CaT</SUB> ≤ 227 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. From
  the so-constructed M<SUB>BH</SUB> - σ<SUB>⋆</SUB> relation for
  our Type 1 AGNs, we estimate the black hole masses for the Type 2
  AGNs and the inactive galaxies in our sample. <BR /> Conclusions:
  We find that our sample of local luminous AGNs is consistent with
  the M<SUB>BH</SUB>-σ<SUB>⋆</SUB> relation of lower luminosity AGNs
  and inactive galaxies, after correcting for dust extinction and the
  rotational contribution to the stellar velocity dispersion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An image of the dust sublimation region in the nucleus of
    NGC 1068
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Pfuhl, O.; Davies, R.; Dexter, J.;
   Netzer, H.; Hönig, S.; Lutz, D.; Schartmann, M.; Sturm, E.; Amorim,
   A.; Brandner, W.; Clénet, Y.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Genzel,
   R.; Gillessen, S.; Gratadour, D.; Kishimoto, M.; Lacour, S.; Millour,
   F.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Peterson, B. M.;
   Petrucci, P. O.; Prieto, M. A.; Rouan, D.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.;
   Sternberg, A.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram,
   K. R. W.; Vermot, P.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2020A&A...634A...1G    Altcode: 2019arXiv191201361G; 2020A&A...634A...1.
  We present near-infrared interferometric data on the Seyfert 2 galaxy
  NGC 1068, obtained with the GRAVITY instrument on the European Southern
  Observatory Very Large Telescope Interferometer. The extensive baseline
  coverage from 5 to 60 Mλ allowed us to reconstruct a continuum image
  of the nucleus with an unrivaled 0.2 pc resolution in the K-band. We
  find a thin ring-like structure of emission with a radius r = 0.24
  ± 0.03 pc, inclination i = 70 ± 5°, position angle PA = -50 ±
  4°, and h/r &lt; 0.14, which we associate with the dust sublimation
  region. The observed morphology is inconsistent with the expected
  signatures of a geometrically and optically thick torus. Instead,
  the infrared emission shows a striking resemblance to the 22 GHz
  maser disc, which suggests they share a common region of origin. The
  near-infrared spectral energy distribution indicates a bolometric
  luminosity of (0.4-4.7) × 10<SUP>45</SUP> erg s<SUP>-1</SUP>,
  behind a large A<SUB>K</SUB> ≈ 5.5 (A<SUB>V</SUB> ≈ 90) screen
  of extinction that also appears to contribute significantly to
  obscuring the broad line region. <P />The reconstructed image and
  interferometric beam are available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr</A>
  (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/634/A1">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/634/A1</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Locating Hot Plasma in Small Flares using Spectroscopic
    Overlappogram Data from the Hinode EUV Imaging Spectrometer
Authors: Harra, Louise; Matthews, Sarah; Long, David; Hasegawa,
   Takahiro; Lee, Kyoung-Sun; Reeves, Katharine K.; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Woods, Magnus
2020SoPh..295...34H    Altcode: 2020arXiv200302908H
  One of the key processes associated with the "standard" flare model is
  chromospheric evaporation, a process during which plasma heated to high
  temperatures by energy deposition at the flare footpoints is driven
  upwards into the corona. Despite several decades of study, a number
  of open questions remain, including the relationship between plasma
  produced during this process and observations of earlier "superhot"
  plasma. The Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) onboard
  Hinode has a wide slot, which is often used as a flare trigger in the
  He II emission-line band. Once the intensity passes a threshold level,
  the study will switch to one focussed on the flaring region. However,
  when the intensity is not high enough to reach the flare trigger
  threshold, these datasets are then available during the entire flare
  period and provide high-cadence spectroscopic observations over a
  large field of view. We make use of data from two such studies of a
  C4.7 flare and a C1.6 flare to probe the relationship between hot Fe
  XXIV plasma and plasmas observed by the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar
  Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) and the X-ray Telescope (XRT) to track
  where the emission comes from and when it begins. The flare trigger
  slot data used in our analysis has one-minute cadence. Although the
  spatial and spectral information are merged in the wide-slot data,
  it is still possible to extract when the hot plasma appears, through
  the appearance of the Fe Xxiv spectral image. It is also possible
  to derive spectrally pure Fe XXIV light curves from the EIS data,
  and compare them with those derived from hard X-rays, enabling a full
  exploration of the evolution of hot emission. The Fe XXIV emission
  peaks just after the peak in the hard X-ray lightcurve; consistent with
  an origin in the evaporation of heated plasma following the transfer
  of energy to the lower atmosphere. A peak was also found for the C4.7
  flare in the RHESSI peak temperature, which occurred before the hard
  X-rays peaked. This suggests that the first peak in hot-plasma emission
  is likely to be directly related to the energy-release process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey - XIX. Type 1 versus type 2 AGN
    dichotomy from the point of view of ionized outflows
Authors: Rojas, A. F.; Sani, E.; Gavignaud, I.; Ricci, C.; Lamperti,
   I.; Koss, M.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Schawinski, K.; Oh, K.; Bauer, F. E.;
   Bischetti, M.; Boissay-Malaquin, R.; Bongiorno, A.; Harrison, F.;
   Kakkad, D.; Masetti, N.; Ricci, F.; Shimizu, T.; Stalevski, M.; Stern,
   D.; Vietri, G.
2020MNRAS.491.5867R    Altcode: 2019MNRAS.tmp.3119R; 2019arXiv191112395R
  We present a detailed study of ionized outflows in a large sample of
  ∼650 hard X-ray-detected active galactic neuclei (AGNs). Using optical
  spectroscopy from the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS), we are able
  to reveal the faint wings of the [O III] emission lines associated
  with outflows covering, for the first time, an unexplored range of
  low AGN bolometric luminosity at low redshift (z ∼0.05). We test
  if and how the incidence and velocity of ionized outflow is related
  to AGN physical parameters: black hole mass (M_{BH}), gas column
  density (N<SUB>H</SUB>), Eddington ratio (λ _{Edd}), [O III], X-ray,
  and bolometric luminosities. We find a higher occurrence of ionized
  outflows in type 1.9 (55 per cent) and type 1 AGNs (46 per cent)
  with respect to type 2 AGNs (24 per cent). While outflows in type 2
  AGNs are evenly balanced between blue and red velocity offsets with
  respect to the [O III] narrow component, they are almost exclusively
  blueshifted in type 1 and type 1.9 AGNs. We observe a significant
  dependence between the outflow occurrence and accretion rate, which
  becomes relevant at high Eddington ratios [log(λ _{Edd}) ≳ -1.7]. We
  interpret such behaviour in the framework of covering factor-Eddington
  ratio dependence. We do not find strong trends of the outflow maximum
  velocity with AGN physical parameters, as an increase with bolometric
  luminosity can be only identified when including samples of AGNs at
  high luminosity and high redshift taken from literature.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Average Radial Structures of Gas Convection in the Solar
    Granulation
Authors: Oba, T.; Iida, Y.; Shimizu, T.
2020ApJ...890..141O    Altcode: 2020arXiv200103575O
  Gas convection is observed in the solar photosphere as granulation,
  I.e., having highly time-dependent cellular patterns, consisting
  of numerous bright cells called granules and dark surrounding
  channels called intergranular lanes. Many efforts have been made to
  characterize the granulation, which may be used as an energy source
  for various types of dynamical phenomena. Although the horizontal
  gas flow dynamics in intergranular lanes may play a vital role,
  they are poorly understood. This is because the Doppler signals can
  be obtained only at the solar limb, where the signals are severely
  degraded by a foreshortening effect. To reduce such a degradation, we
  use Hinode's spectroscopic data, which are free from a seeing-induced
  image degradation, and improve the image quality by correcting for
  stray light in the instruments. The data set continuously covers from
  the solar disk to the limb, providing a multidirectional line-of-sight
  (LOS) diagnosis against the granulation. The obtained LOS flow-field
  variation across the disk indicates a horizontal flow speed of 1.8-2.4
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. We also derive the spatial distribution of the
  horizontal flow speed, which is 1.6 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> in granules and
  1.8 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> in intergranular lanes, and where the maximum
  speed is inside intergranular lanes. This result newly suggests
  the following sequence of horizontal flow: a hot rising gas parcel
  is strongly accelerated from the granular center, even beyond the
  transition from the granules to the intergranular lanes, resulting in
  the fastest speed inside the intergranular lanes, and the gas may also
  experience decelerations in the intergranular lane.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Molecular outflows in local galaxies: Method comparison and
    a role of intermittent AGN driving
Authors: Lutz, D.; Sturm, E.; Janssen, A.; Veilleux, S.; Aalto, S.;
   Cicone, C.; Contursi, A.; Davies, R. I.; Feruglio, C.; Fischer, J.;
   Fluetsch, A.; Garcia-Burillo, S.; Genzel, R.; González-Alfonso, E.;
   Graciá-Carpio, J.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Maiolino, R.; Schruba, A.;
   Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Tacconi, L. J.; Weiß, A.
2020A&A...633A.134L    Altcode: 2019arXiv191105608L
  We report new detections and limits from a NOEMA and ALMA CO(1-0)
  search for molecular outflows in 13 local galaxies with high
  far-infrared surface brightness, and combine these with local
  universe CO outflow results from the literature. The CO line ratios
  and spatial outflow structure of our targets provide some constraints
  on the conversion steps from observables to physical quantities such
  as molecular mass outflow rates. Where available, ratios between
  outflow emission in higher J CO transitions and in CO(1-0) are
  typically consistent with excitation R<SUB>i1</SUB> ≲ 1. However,
  for IRAS 13120-5453, R<SUB>31</SUB> = 2.10 ± 0.29 indicates optically
  thin CO in the outflow. Like much of the outflow literature, we use
  α<SUB>CO(1 - 0)</SUB> = 0.8, and we present arguments for using
  C = 1 in deriving molecular mass outflow rates Ṁ<SUB>out</SUB> =
  CM<SUB>out</SUB>v<SUB>out</SUB>/R<SUB>out</SUB>. We compare the two main
  methods for molecular outflow detection: CO millimeter interferometry
  and Herschel OH-based spectroscopic outflow searches. For 26 sources
  studied with both methods, we find an 80% agreement in detecting
  v<SUB>out</SUB> ≳ 150 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> outflows, and non-matches can
  be plausibly ascribed to outflow geometry and signal-to-noise ratio. For
  a published sample of 12 bright ultraluminous infrared galaxies with
  detailed OH-based outflow modeling, CO outflows are detected in all but
  one. Outflow masses, velocities, and sizes for these 11 sources agree
  well between the two methods, and modest remaining differences may
  relate to the different but overlapping regions sampled by CO emission
  and OH absorption. Outflow properties correlate better with active
  galactic nucleus (AGN) luminosity and with bolometric luminosity than
  with far-infrared surface brightness. The most massive outflows are
  found for systems with current AGN activity, but significant outflows
  in nonAGN systems must relate to star formation or to AGN activity
  in the recent past. We report scaling relations for the increase of
  outflow mass, rate, momentum rate, and kinetic power with bolometric
  luminosity. Short flow times of ∼10<SUP>6</SUP> yr and some sources
  with resolved multiple outflow episodes support a role of intermittent
  driving, likely by AGNs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Molecular gas inflows and outflows in ultraluminous infrared
    galaxies at z ∼ 0.2 and one QSO at z = 6.1
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Sturm, E.; Graciá-Carpio, J.; Veilleux,
   S.; Shimizu, T.; Lutz, D.; Stone, M.; González-Alfonso, E.; Davies,
   R.; Fischer, J.; Genzel, R.; Maiolino, R.; Sternberg, A.; Tacconi,
   L.; Verma, A.
2020A&A...633L...4H    Altcode: 2019arXiv191205548H
  <BR /> Aims: Our aim is to search for and characterize inflows and
  outflows of molecular gas in four ultraluminous infrared galaxies
  (ULIRGs; L<SUB>IR</SUB> &gt; 10<SUP>12</SUP>L<SUB>⊙</SUB>) at z ∼
  0.2-0.3 and one distant quasi-stellar object (QSO) at z = 6.13. <BR
  /> Methods: We used Herschel/PACS and ALMA Band 7 observations of
  the hydroxyl molecule (OH) line at rest-frame wavelength 119 μm,
  which in absorption can provide unambiguous evidence of inflows or
  outflows of molecular gas in nuclear regions of galaxies. Our study
  contributes to doubling the number of OH 119 μm observations of
  luminous systems at z ∼ 0.2-0.3, and pushes the search for molecular
  outflows based on the OH 119 μm transition to z ∼ 6. <BR /> Results:
  We detect OH 119 μm high-velocity absorption wings in three of the
  four ULIRGs. In two cases, IRAS F20036-1547 and IRAS F13352+6402, the
  blueshifted absorption profiles indicate the presence of powerful and
  fast (∼200-500 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) molecular gas outflows. Consistent
  with an inside-out quenching scenario, these outflows are depleting the
  central reservoir of star-forming molecular gas at a rate similar to
  that of intense star formation activity. For the starburst-dominated
  system IRAS 10091+4704, we detect an inverted P Cygni profile that
  is unique among ULIRGs and indicates the presence of a fast (∼400
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) inflow of molecular gas at a rate of ∼100
  M<SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP> towards the central region. Finally,
  we tentatively detect (∼3σ) the OH 119 μm doublet in absorption
  in the z = 6.13 QSO ULAS J131911+095051. The OH 119 μm feature is
  blueshifted with a median velocity that suggests the presence of a
  molecular outflow, although characterized by a modest molecular mass
  loss rate of ∼200 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP>. This value is
  comparable to the small mass outflow rates found in the stacking of
  the [C II] spectra of other z ∼ 6 QSOs and suggests that ejective
  feedback in this phase of the evolution of ULAS J131911+095051 has
  subsided. <P />Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science
  instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia
  and with important participation from NASA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: BAT AGN spectroscopic
    survey. XI. IR photometry (Ichikawa+, 2019)
Authors: Ichikawa, K.; Ricci, C.; Ueda, Y.; Bauer, F. E.; Kawamuro,
   T.; Koss, M. J.; Oh, K.; Rosario, D. J.; Shimizu, T. T.; Stalevski,
   M.; Fuller, L.; Packham, C.; Trakhtenbrot, B.
2020yCat..18700031I    Altcode:
  Our initial sample is based on the sample of Ichikawa+ (2017,
  J/ApJ/835/74), which contains the 606 non-blazar AGNs from the Swift/BAT
  70 month catalog (Baumgartner+ 2013, J/ApJS/207/19) at galactic
  latitudes (|b|&gt;10°) for which secure spectroscopic redshifts are
  available. In this study, we use the column density (N<SUB>H</SUB>)
  and the absorption-corrected 14-150keV luminosity (L<SUB>14-150</SUB>)
  tabulated in Ricci+ (2017, J/ApJS/233/17). <P />(1 data file).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: IRAS F08572+3915 CO(1-0) datacube
    (Herrera-Camus+, 2020)
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Janssen, A.; Sturm, E.; Lutz, D.; Veilleux,
   S.; Davies, R.; Shimizu, T.; Gonzalez-Alfonso, E.; Rupke, D. S. N.;
   Tacconi, L.; Genzel, R.; Cicone, C.; Maiolino, R.; Contursi, A.;
   Gracia-Carpio, J.
2020yCat..36350047H    Altcode:
  In total, there have been three IRAM NOEMA (formerly Plateau de Bure
  Interferometer) observing programs that target the CO(1-0) outflow
  in IRAS F08572+3915 (May-Oct 2011, Feb-March 2013 and March 2015-Feb
  2016). <P />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Tending the Fire: A molecular gas study of hard X-ray selected
    AGN from the BASS survey.
Authors: Koss, M.; BASS Survey Team; Treister, E.; Cicone, C.; Shimizu,
   T.; Saintonge, A.; Privon, G.; Sanders, D.; Schawinski, K.; Lamperti,
   I.; Mushotzky, R.
2020AAS...23532503K    Altcode:
  Over the last 30 years the importance of host galaxy molecular gas
  for growing black holes has been intensely debated. We have observed
  a a volume-limited sample of 220 nearby AGN (0.01 &lt; z &lt; 0.05)
  using the CO 2-1 line with the JCMT and APEX telescopes. The AGN
  are selected from the Swift-BAT all sky hard X-ray survey. We compare
  these AGN host galaxies to inactive galaxies selected with the IRAM 30m
  COLD GASS survey to understand trends with host morphology and stellar
  mass. We also study how molecular gas fraction is related to various AGN
  properties (Eddington ratio, black hole mass, bolometric luminosity,
  column density) from the BASS survey. Overall we find that AGN reside
  in galaxies with higher overall gas fractions than inactive galaxies of
  matched morphology and stellar mass, contain rare gas rich ellipticals,
  and the highest Eddington ratio AGN have higher gas fractions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: NGC 1068 GRAVITY reconstructed
    image (GRAVITY+, 2020)
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Pfuhl, O.; Davies, R.; Dexter, J.;
   Netzer, H.; Hoenig, S.; Lutz, D.; Schartmann, M.; Sturm, E.; Amorim,
   A.; Brandner, W.; Clenet, Y.; de Zeeuw, P. T.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer,
   F.; Foerster Schreiber, N. M.; Gao, F.; Garcia, P. J. V.; Genzel,
   R.; Gillessen, S.; Gratadour, D.; Kishimoto, M.; Lacour, S.; Millour,
   F.; Ott, T.; Paumard, T.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.; Peterson, B. M.;
   Petrucci, P. O.; Prieto, M. A.; Rouan, D.; Shangguan, J.; Shimizu, T.;
   Sternberg, A.; Straub, O.; Straubmeier, C.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tristram,
   K. R. W.; Vermot, P.; Waisberg, I.; Widmann, F.; Woillez, J.
2020yCat..36340001G    Altcode:
  We present new 0.2pc resolution observations from the GRAVITY
  interferometer on the VLT, which spatially resolve the hot dust
  continuum in the central parsec of NGC 1068. <P />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: GRAVITY and the Galactic Centre
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...26G    Altcode:
  On a clear night, our home galaxy, the Milky Way, is visible as a
  starry ribbon across the sky. Its core is located in the constellation
  of Sagittarius, approximately where the bright glow is interrupted
  by the darkest dust filaments. There, hidden, lies a massive black
  hole. To peer through the obscuring clouds and see the stars and gas
  near the black hole we use GRAVITY. The main GRAVITY results are the
  detection of gra- vitational redshift, the most precise mass- distance
  measurement, the test of the equivalence principle, and the detection
  of orbital motion near the black hole.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An Image of the Dust Sublimation Region in the Nucleus of
    NGC 1068
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...24G    Altcode:
  The superb resolution of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
  (VLTI) and the unrivalled sensitivity of GRAVITY have allowed us to
  reconstruct the first detailed image of the dust sublimation region in
  an active galaxy. In the nearby archetypal Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068,
  the 2 µm continuum emission traces a highly inclined thin ring-like
  structure with a radius of 0.24 pc. The observed morphology challenges
  the picture of a geometrically and optically thick torus.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spatially Resolved Accretion-Ejection in Compact Binaries
    with GRAVITY
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...29G    Altcode:
  The GRAVITY instrument at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer has
  led to the first spatially resolved observations of X-ray binaries at
  scales comparable to the binary orbit, providing unprecedented spatial
  information on their accretion-ejection mechanisms. In particular,
  observations of the hypercritical accretor SS433 have revealed a
  variety of spatial structures at the heart of this exotic microquasar,
  including bipolar outflows, super-Keplerian equatorial outflows and
  extended baryonic jets photoionised by collimated ultraviolet radiation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> Survey: Data Release and Final Survey
    Paper
Authors: Wisnioski, E.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Fossati, M.;
   Mendel, J. T.; Wilman, D.; Genzel, R.; Bender, R.; Wuyts, S.; Davies,
   R. L.; Übler, H.; Bandara, K.; Beifiori, A.; Belli, S.; Brammer, G.;
   Chan, J.; Davies, R. I.; Fabricius, M.; Galametz, A.; Lang, P.; Lutz,
   D.; Nelson, E. J.; Momcheva, I.; Price, S.; Rosario, D.; Saglia, R.;
   Seitz, S.; Shimizu, T.; Tacconi, L. J.; Tadaki, K.; van Dokkum, P. G.;
   Wuyts, E.
2019ApJ...886..124W    Altcode: 2019arXiv190911096W
  We present the completed KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> survey, an integral field
  spectroscopic survey of 739 {log}({M}<SUB>\star </SUB>/{M}<SUB>⊙
  </SUB>)&gt; 9 galaxies at 0.6 &lt; z &lt; 2.7 using the K-band
  Multi Object Spectrograph (KMOS) at the Very Large Telescope. The
  KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> survey provides a population-wide census of
  kinematics, star formation, outflows, and nebular gas conditions both
  on and off the star-forming galaxy main sequence through the spatially
  resolved and integrated properties of Hα, [N II], and [S II] emission
  lines. We detect Hα emission for 91% of galaxies on the main sequence
  of star formation and 79% overall. The depth of the survey has allowed
  us to detect galaxies with star formation rates below 1 M <SUB>⊙</SUB>
  yr<SUP>-1</SUP>, as well as to resolve 81% of detected galaxies with
  ≥3 resolution elements along the kinematic major axis. The detection
  fraction of Hα is a strong function of both color and offset from the
  main sequence, with the detected and nondetected samples exhibiting
  different spectral energy distribution shapes. Comparison of Hα and
  UV+IR star formation rates reveal that dust attenuation corrections may
  be underestimated by 0.5 dex at the highest masses ({log}({M}<SUB>\star
  </SUB>/{M}<SUB>⊙ </SUB>)&gt; 10.5). We confirm our first year results
  of a high rotation-dominated fraction (monotonic velocity gradient
  and v <SUB>rot</SUB>/{σ }<SUB>0</SUB>&gt; \sqrt{3.36}) of 77% for
  the full KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> sample. The rotation-dominated fraction
  is a function of both stellar mass and redshift, with the strongest
  evolution measured over the redshift range of the survey for galaxies
  with {log}({M}<SUB>\star </SUB>/{M}<SUB>⊙ </SUB>)&lt; 10.5. With this
  paper, we include a final data release of all 739 observed objects (<A
  href="http://www.mpe.mpg.de/ir/KMOS3D">http://www.mpe.mpg.de/ir/KMOS3D</A>).
  <P />Based on observations obtained at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) of
  the European Southern Observatory (ESO), Paranal, Chile (ESO program IDS
  092A-0091, 093.A-0079, 093.A-0079, 094.A-0217, 095.A-0047, 096.A-0025,
  097.A-0028, 098.A-0045, 099.A-0013, 0100.A-0039, and 0101.A-0022).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hunting Exoplanets with Single-Mode Optical Interferometry
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...47G    Altcode:
  The GRAVITY instrument was primarily conceived for imaging and
  astrometry of the Galactic centre. However, its sensitivity and
  astrometric capabilities have also enabled interferometry to reach
  a new domain of astrophysics: exoplanetology. In March 2019, the
  GRAVITY collaboration published the first spectrum and astrometry of an
  exoplanet obtained by optical interferometry. In this article, we show
  how this observation is paving the way to even more exciting discoveries
  — finding new planets, and characterising their atmospheres.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spatially Resolving the Inner Gaseous Disc of the Herbig Star
    51 Oph through its CO Ro-vibration Emission
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...40G    Altcode:
  Near-infrared interferometry gives us the opportunity to
  spatially resolve the circumstellar environment of young stars at
  sub-astronomical-unit (au) scales, which a standalone telescope could
  not reach. In particular, the sensitivity of GRAVITY on the VLTI allows
  us to spatially resolve the CO overtone emission at 2.3 microns. In
  this article, we present a new method of using the model of the CO
  spectrum to reconstruct the differential phase signal and extract the
  geometry and size of the emitting region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spatially Resolving the Quasar Broad Emission Line Region
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...20A    Altcode:
  The angular resolution of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
  (VLTI) and the excellent sensitivity of GRAVITY have led to the
  first detection of spatially resolved kinematics of high velocity
  atomic gas near an accreting super- massive black hole, revealing
  rotation on sub-parsec scales in the quasar 3C 273 at a distance of
  550 Mpc. The observations can be explained as the result of circular
  orbits in a thick disc configuration around a 300 million solar mass
  black hole. Within an ongoing Large Programme, this capability will
  be used to study the kinematics of atomic gas and its relation to hot
  dust in a sample of quasars and Seyfert galaxies. We will measure a
  new radius-luminosity relation from spatially resolved data and test
  the current methods used to measure black hole mass in large surveys.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multiple Star Systems in the Orion Nebula
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...36G    Altcode:
  GRAVITY observations reveal that most massive stars in the
  Orion Trapezium cluster live in multiple systems. Our deep,
  milliarcsecond-resolution interferometry fills the gap at 1-100
  astronomical units (au), which is not accessible to traditional imaging
  and spectroscopy, but is crucial to uncovering the mystery of high-mass
  star formation.The new observations find a significantly higher
  companion fraction than earlier studies of mostly OB associations. The
  observed distribution of mass ratios declines steeply with mass and
  follows a Salpeter power-law initial mass function. The observations
  therefore exclude stellar mergers as the dominant formation mechanism
  for massive stars in Orion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Images at the Highest Angular Resolution with GRAVITY: The
    Case of η Carinae
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...31G    Altcode:
  The main goal of an interferometer is to probe the physics of
  astronomical objects at the highest possible angular resolution. The
  most intuitive way of doing this is by reconstructing images from the
  interferometric data. GRAVITY at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
  (VLTI) has proven to be a fantastic instrument in this endeavour. In
  this article, we describe the reconstruction of the wind-wind collision
  cavity of the massive binary η Car with GRAVITY across two spectral
  lines: HeI and Brγ.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The multiphase gas structure and kinematics in the
    circumnuclear region of NGC 5728
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Davies, R. I.; Lutz, D.; Burtscher, L.;
   Lin, M.; Baron, D.; Davies, R. L.; Genzel, R.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Koss,
   M.; Maciejewski, W.; Müller-Sánchez, F.; Orban de Xivry, G.; Price,
   S. H.; Ricci, C.; Riffel, R.; Riffel, R. A.; Rosario, D.; Schartmann,
   M.; Schnorr-Müller, A.; Sternberg, A.; Sturm, E.; Storchi-Bergmann,
   T.; Tacconi, L.; Veilleux, S.
2019MNRAS.490.5860S    Altcode: 2019MNRAS.tmp.2449S; 2019arXiv190703801S
  We report on our combined analysis of HST, VLT/MUSE, VLT/SINFONI, and
  ALMA observations of the local Seyfert 2 galaxy, NGC 5728 to investigate
  in detail the feeding and feedback of the active galactic nucleus
  (AGN). The data sets simultaneously probe the morphology, excitation,
  and kinematics of the stars, ionized gas, and molecular gas over a
  large range of spatial scales (10 pc to 10 kpc). NGC 5728 contains a
  large stellar bar that is driving gas along prominent dust lanes to the
  inner 1 kpc where the gas settles into a circumnuclear ring. The ring
  is strongly star forming and contains a substantial population of young
  stars as indicated by the lowered stellar velocity dispersion and gas
  excitation consistent with H II regions. We model the kinematics of
  the ring using the velocity field of the CO (2-1) emission and stars
  and find it is consistent with a rotating disc. The outer regions
  of the disc, where the dust lanes meet the ring, show signatures of
  inflow at a rate of 1 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP>. Inside the
  ring, we observe three molecular gas components corresponding to the
  circular rotation of the outer ring, a warped disc, and the nuclear
  stellar bar. The AGN is driving an ionized gas outflow that reaches
  a radius of 250 pc with a mass outflow rate of 0.08 M<SUB>⊙</SUB>
  yr<SUP>-1</SUP> consistent with its luminosity and scaling relations
  from previous studies. While we observe distinct holes in CO emission
  which could be signs of molecular gas removal, we find that largely
  the AGN is not disrupting the structure of the circumnuclear region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Probing the Discs of Herbig Ae/Be Stars at Terrestrial Orbits
Authors: GRAVITY Collaboration; Abuter, R.; Accardo, M.; Adler,
   T.; Amorim, A.; Anugu, N.; Ávila, G.; Bauböck, M.; Benisty, M.;
   Berger, J. -P.; Bestenlehner, J. M.; Beust, H.; Blind, N.; Bonnefoy,
   M.; Bonnet, H.; Bourget, P.; Bouvier, J.; Brandner, W.; Brast,
   R.; Buron, A.; Burtscher, L.; Cantalloube, F.; Caratti O Garatti,
   A.; Caselli, P.; Cassaing, F.; Chapron, F.; Charnay, B.; Choquet,
   É.; Clénet, Y.; Collin, C.; Coudé Du Foresto, V.; Davies, R.;
   Deen, C.; Delplancke-Ströbele, F.; Dembet, R.; Derie, F.; de Wit,
   W. -J.; Dexter, J.; de Zeeuw, T.; Dougados, C.; Dubus, G.; Duvert,
   G.; Ebert, M.; Eckart, A.; Eisenhauer, F.; Esselborn, M.; Eupen, F.;
   Fédou, P.; Ferreira, M. C.; Finger, G.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.;
   Gao, F.; García Dabó, C. E.; Garcia Lopez, R.; Garcia, P. J. V.;
   Gendron, É.; Genzel, R.; Gerhard, O.; Gil, J. P.; Gillessen, S.;
   Gonté, F.; Gordo, P.; Gratadour, D.; Greenbaum, A.; Grellmann, R.;
   Grözinger, U.; Guajardo, P.; Guieu, S.; Habibi, M.; Haguenauer, P.;
   Hans, O.; Haubois, X.; Haug, M.; Haußmann, F.; Henning, T.; Hippler,
   S.; Hönig, S. F.; Horrobin, M.; Huber, A.; Hubert, Z.; Hubin, N.;
   Hummel, C. A.; Jakob, G.; Janssen, A.; Jimenez Rosales, A.; Jochum,
   L.; Jocou, L.; Kammerer, J.; Karl, M.; Kaufer, A.; Kellner, S.;
   Kendrew, S.; Kern, L.; Kervella, P.; Kiekebusch, M.; Kishimoto, M.;
   Klarmann, L.; Klein, R.; Köhler, R.; Kok, Y.; Kolb, J.; Koutoulaki,
   M.; Kulas, M.; Labadie, L.; Lacour, S.; Lagrange, A. -M.; Lapeyrère,
   V.; Laun, W.; Lazareff, B.; Le Bouquin, J. -B.; Léna, P.; Lenzen,
   R.; Lévêque, S.; Lin, C. -C.; Lippa, M.; Lutz, D.; Magnard, Y.;
   Maire, A. -L.; Mehrgan, L.; Mérand, A.; Millour, F.; Mollière,
   P.; Moulin, T.; Müller, A.; Müller, E.; Müller, F.; Netzer, H.;
   Neumann, U.; Nowak, M.; Oberti, S.; Ott, T.; Pallanca, L.; Panduro,
   J.; Pasquini, L.; Paumard, T.; Percheron, I.; Perraut, K.; Perrin, G.;
   Peterson, B. M.; Petrucci, P. -O.; Pflüger, A.; Pfuhl, O.; Phan Duc,
   T.; Pineda, J. E.; Plewa, P. M.; Popovic, D.; Pott, J. -U.; Prieto,
   A.; Pueyo, L.; Rabien, S.; Ramírez, A.; Ramos, J. R.; Rau, C.; Ray,
   T.; Riquelme, M.; Rodríguez-Coira, G.; Rohloff, R. -R.; Rouan, D.;
   Rousset, G.; Sanchez-Bermudez, J.; Schartmann, M.; Scheithauer,
   S.; Schöller, M.; Schuhler, N.; Segura-Cox, D.; Shangguan, J.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Spyromilio, J.; Sternberg, A.; Stock, M. R.; Straub,
   O.; Straubmeier, C.; Sturm, E.; Suárez Valles, M.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Thi, W. -F.; Tristram, K. R. W.; Valenzuela, J. J.; van Boekel, R.;
   van Dishoeck, E. F.; Vermot, P.; Vincent, F.; von Fellenberg, S.;
   Waisberg, I.; Wang, J. J.; Wank, I.; Weber, J.; Weigelt, G.; Widmann,
   F.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiest, M.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wittkowski, M.; Woillez,
   J.; Wolff, B.; Yang, P.; Yazici, S.; Ziegler, D.; Zins, G.
2019Msngr.178...38G    Altcode:
  More than 4000 exoplanets are known to date in systems that differ
  greatly from our Solar System. In particular, inner exoplanets tend
  to follow orbits around their parent star that are much more compact
  than that of Earth. These systems are also extremely diverse, covering
  a range of intrinsic properties. Studying the main physi- cal processes
  at play in the innermost regions of the protoplanetary discs is crucial
  to understanding how these planets form and migrate so close to their
  host. With GRAVITY, we focused on the study of near-infrared emission
  of a sample of young intermediate- mass stars, the Herbig Ae/Be stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: AGN global star-forming properties
    (Shimizu+, 2017)
Authors: Shimizu, T. T.; Mushotzky, R. F.; Melendez, M.; Koss, M. J.;
   Barger, A. J.; Cowie, L. L.
2019yCat..74663161S    Altcode:
  Using our high-quality Herschel photometry from Melendez
  et al. (2014. Cat. J/ApJ/794/152) and Shimizu et al. (2016,
  Cat. J/ApJ/794/152) combined with archival WISE 12 and 22um photometry,
  we have constructed and modelled the SEDs for over 300 AGN. Our sample
  is unique given its nearly unbiased selection based on ultrahard X-ray
  detection, as well as its local nature that eliminates possible biases
  and source confusion. <P />(1 data file).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Achievements of Hinode in the first eleven years
Authors: Hinode Review Team; Al-Janabi, Khalid; Antolin, Patrick;
   Baker, Deborah; Bellot Rubio, Luis R.; Bradley, Louisa; Brooks,
   David H.; Centeno, Rebecca; Culhane, J. Leonard; Del Zanna, Giulio;
   Doschek, George A.; Fletcher, Lyndsay; Hara, Hirohisa; Harra,
   Louise K.; Hillier, Andrew S.; Imada, Shinsuke; Klimchuk, James A.;
   Mariska, John T.; Pereira, Tiago M. D.; Reeves, Katharine K.; Sakao,
   Taro; Sakurai, Takashi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shimojo, Masumi; Shiota,
   Daikou; Solanki, Sami K.; Sterling, Alphonse C.; Su, Yingna; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Tiwari, Sanjiv K.; Toriumi, Shin;
   Ugarte-Urra, Ignacio; Warren, Harry P.; Watanabe, Tetsuya; Young,
   Peter R.
2019PASJ...71R...1H    Altcode:
  Hinode is Japan's third solar mission following Hinotori (1981-1982)
  and Yohkoh (1991-2001): it was launched on 2006 September 22 and is in
  operation currently. Hinode carries three instruments: the Solar Optical
  Telescope, the X-Ray Telescope, and the EUV Imaging Spectrometer. These
  instruments were built under international collaboration with the
  National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the UK Science and
  Technology Facilities Council, and its operation has been contributed
  to by the European Space Agency and the Norwegian Space Center. After
  describing the satellite operations and giving a performance evaluation
  of the three instruments, reviews are presented on major scientific
  discoveries by Hinode in the first eleven years (one solar cycle long)
  of its operation. This review article concludes with future prospects
  for solar physics research based on the achievements of Hinode.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of Solar-C_EUVST structural design
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hara, Hirohisa;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Kawate, Tomoko; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Imada, Shinsuke
2019SPIE11118E..1OS    Altcode:
  The Solar-C_EUVST is a mission designed to provide high-quality solar
  spectroscopic data covering a wide temperature range of the chromosphere
  to flaring corona. To fulfill a high throughput requirement, the
  instrument consists of only two optical components; a 28-cm primary
  mirror and a segmented toroidal grating which have high reflective
  coatings in EUV-UV range. We present a mission payload structural
  design which accommodates long focal length optical components and
  a launcher condition/launch environment (JAXA Epsilon). We also
  present a mechanical design of primary mirror assembly which enables
  slit-scan observations, an image stabilizing tip-tilt control, and a
  focus adjustment on orbit, together with an optomechanical design of
  the primary mirror and its supporting system which gives optically
  tolerant wavefront error against a large temperature increase due to
  an absorption of visible and IR lights.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Concept study of Solar-C_EUVST optical design
Authors: Kawate, Tomoko; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke; Tsuzuki,
   Toshihiro; Katsukawa, Yukio; Hara, Hirohisa; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Warren, Harry; Teriaca, Luca; Korendyke, Clarence
   M.; Brown, Charles
2019SPIE11118E..1NK    Altcode:
  The main characteristics of Solar-C_EUVST are the high temporal and
  high spatial resolutions over a wide temperature coverage. In order
  to realize the instrument for meeting these scientific requirements
  under size constraints given by the JAXA Epsilon vehicle, we examined
  four-dimensional optical parameter space of possible solutions of
  geometrical optical parameters such as mirror diameter, focal length,
  grating magnification, and so on. As a result, we have identified
  the solution space that meets the EUVST science objectives and rocket
  envelope requirements. A single solution was selected and used to define
  the initial optical parameters for the concept study of the baseline
  architecture for defining the mission concept. For this solution, we
  optimized the grating and geometrical parameters by ray tracing of the
  Zemax software. Consequently, we found an optics system that fulfills
  the requirement for a 0.4" angular resolution over a field of view of
  100" (including margins) covering spectral ranges of 170-215, 463-542,
  557-637, 690-850, 925-1085, and 1115-1275 A. This design achieves an
  effective area 10 times larger than the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging
  Spectrometer onboard the Hinode satellite, and will provide seamless
  observations of 4.2-7.2 log(K) plasmas for the first time. Tolerance
  analyses were performed based on the optical design, and the moving
  range and step resolution of focus mechanisms were identified. In
  the presentation, we describe the derivation of the solution space,
  optimization of the optical parameters, and show the results of ray
  tracing and tolerance analyses.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar-C_EUVST mission
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke; Kawate, Tomoko;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Hara, Hirohisa; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Toriumi, Shin; Watanabe, Tetsuya; Yokoyama,
   Takaaki; Korendyke, Clarence M.; Warren, Harry P.; Tarbell, Ted; De
   Pontieu, Bart; Teriaca, Luca; Schühle, Udo H.; Solanki, Sami; Harra,
   Louise K.; Matthews, Sarah; Fludra, A.; Auchère, F.; Andretta, V.;
   Naletto, G.; Zhukov, A.
2019SPIE11118E..07S    Altcode:
  Solar-C EUVST (EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope) is a
  solar physics mission concept that was selected as a candidate for
  JAXA competitive M-class missions in July 2018. The onboard science
  instrument, EUVST, is an EUV spectrometer with slit-jaw imaging
  system that will simultaneously observe the solar atmosphere from the
  photosphere/chromosphere up to the corona with seamless temperature
  coverage, high spatial resolution, and high throughput for the first
  time. The mission is designed to provide a conclusive answer to the
  most fundamental questions in solar physics: how fundamental processes
  lead to the formation of the solar atmosphere and the solar wind, and
  how the solar atmosphere becomes unstable, releasing the energy that
  drives solar flares and eruptions. The entire instrument structure
  and the primary mirror assembly with scanning and tip-tilt fine
  pointing capability for the EUVST are being developed in Japan, with
  spectrograph and slit-jaw imaging hardware and science contributions
  from US and European countries. The mission will be launched and
  installed in a sun-synchronous polar orbit by a JAXA Epsilon vehicle in
  2025. ISAS/JAXA coordinates the conceptual study activities during the
  current mission definition phase in collaboration with NAOJ and other
  universities. The team is currently working towards the JAXA final
  down-selection expected at the end of 2019, with strong support from
  US and European colleagues. The paper provides an overall description
  of the mission concept, key technologies, and the latest status.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design of all-reflective space-borne 1-m aperture solar
    optical telescope
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Hara, H.; Katsukawa, Y.; Kano, R.; Shimizu,
   T.; Ichimoto, K.
2019SPIE11180E..0RS    Altcode:
  A 1-m aperture optical telescope is planned for a future Japanese solar
  mission. The telescope is designed to provide high spatial resolution
  data of solar lower atmosphere from the photosphere to the uppermost
  chromosphere with enhanced spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric
  capabilities covering a wide wavelength region from UV to near IR where
  many useful spectral lines and continua exist for physical diagnosis of
  the solar magnetized atmosphere. We designed an allreflective telescope
  to fulfill the scientific and engineering requirements. From a thermal
  view point, a Gregorian telescope is the most suitable. To avoid
  chromatic aberration, a tri-aspheric-mirror collimator coupling to
  the Gregorian was designed to give a diffraction-limited performance
  over the FOV by allowing a field curvature. The field curvature can
  be compensated by an off-axis Ritchey Chretien reimaging optics at an
  entrance of focal plane instrument, which has an opposite sign in the
  field curvature to the Gregorian. We also briefly studied structural
  design of all-reflective 1-m aperture solar optical telescope for the
  space solar mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: UFSS (ultra fine sun sensor): CCD sun sensor with sub-arc
    second accuracy for the next solar observing satellite SOLAR-C
Authors: Tsuno, K.; Wada, S.; Ogawa, T.; Shimizu, T.; Hasegawa, T.;
   Kubo, M.; Murao, H.; Mizumoto, S.; Fujishima, S.; Toyonaga, K.
2019SPIE11180E..4OT    Altcode:
  The Ultra Fine Sun Sensor (UFSS) on board the HINODE solar observing
  satellite is one of the most successful sun sensors. It is the linear
  CCD sun sensor with a special detection method using multiple slits,
  called the periodic reticle. The angular resolution of 0.14 arcsec
  in the noise equivalent angle (NEA) and 1 arcsec stability were
  achieved by the sensor head, of 1.2 kg weight. The concept of the
  detection method and processing algorithm of the Sun's direction
  is described. The system is modeled and the dynamic response of the
  system is characterized by the first-order lag system. By utilizing
  this characteristic, a resolution improvement three times higher can be
  expected by adjusting the parameters with a small modification to the
  HINODE UFSS processing algorithm. The design for a new UFSS for the
  next generation solar observation satellite, SOLAR-C, shall include
  these modifications. The thermomechanical design is also reviewed to
  improve stability and a design policy is obtained.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric polarimetry through multiline observations of
the 850 nm spectral region III: Chromospheric jets driven by twisted
    magnetic fields
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Iijima, H.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu,
   T.; Carlsson, M.; de la Cruz Rodríguez, J.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Orozco
   Suárez, D.; Oba, T.; Anan, T.; Kubo, M.; Kawabata, Y.; Ichimoto,
   K.; Suematsu, Y.
2019MNRAS.486.4203Q    Altcode: 2019MNRAS.tmp.1081N; 2019arXiv190409151Q
  We investigate the diagnostic potential of the spectral lines at 850
  nm for understanding the magnetism of the lower atmosphere. For that
  purpose, we use a newly developed 3D simulation of a chromospheric
  jet to check the sensitivity of the spectral lines to this phenomenon
  as well as our ability to infer the atmospheric information through
  spectropolarimetric inversions of noisy synthetic data. We start
  comparing the benefits of inverting the entire spectrum at 850 nm versus
  only the Ca II 8542 Å spectral line. We found a better match of the
  input atmosphere for the former case, mainly at lower heights. However,
  the results at higher layers were not accurate. After several tests,
  we determined that we need to weight more the chromospheric lines
  than the photospheric ones in the computation of the goodness of the
  fit. The new inversion configuration allows us to obtain better fits and
  consequently more accurate physical parameters. Therefore, to extract
  the most from multiline inversions, a proper set of weights needs to
  be estimated. Besides that, we conclude again that the lines at 850
  nm, or a similar arrangement with Ca II 8542 Å plus Zeeman-sensitive
  photospheric lines, pose the best-observing configuration for examining
  the thermal and magnetic properties of the lower solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evolution and Origin of Ionized Gas Velocity Dispersion
    from z ∼ 2.6 to z ∼ 0.6 with KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP>
Authors: Übler, H.; Genzel, R.; Wisnioski, E.; Förster Schreiber,
   N. M.; Shimizu, T. T.; Price, S. H.; Tacconi, L. J.; Belli, S.;
   Wilman, D. J.; Fossati, M.; Mendel, J. T.; Davies, R. L.; Beifiori,
   A.; Bender, R.; Brammer, G. B.; Burkert, A.; Chan, J.; Davies, R. I.;
   Fabricius, M.; Galametz, A.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Lang, P.; Lutz, D.;
   Momcheva, I. G.; Naab, T.; Nelson, E. J.; Saglia, R. P.; Tadaki, K.;
   van Dokkum, P. G.; Wuyts, S.
2019ApJ...880...48U    Altcode: 2019arXiv190602737U
  We present the 0.6 &lt; z &lt; 2.6 evolution of the ionized gas
  velocity dispersion in 175 star-forming disk galaxies based on
  data from the full KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> integral field spectroscopic
  survey. In a forward-modeling Bayesian framework including instrumental
  effects and beam-smearing, we fit simultaneously the observed galaxy
  velocity and velocity dispersion along the kinematic major axis to
  derive the intrinsic velocity dispersion σ <SUB>0</SUB>. We find
  a reduction of the average intrinsic velocity dispersion of disk
  galaxies as a function of cosmic time, from σ <SUB>0</SUB> ∼ 45 km
  s<SUP>-1</SUP> at z ∼ 2.3 to σ <SUB>0</SUB> ∼ 30 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  at z ∼ 0.9. There is substantial intrinsic scatter ({σ }<SUB>{σ
  </SUB><SUB>0</SUB>,{int}}≈ 10 {km} {{{s}}}<SUP>-1</SUP>) around
  the best-fit σ <SUB>0</SUB>-z relation beyond what can be accounted
  for from the typical measurement uncertainties (δσ <SUB>0</SUB>
  ≈ 12 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>), independent of other identifiable galaxy
  parameters. This potentially suggests a dynamic mechanism such as
  minor mergers or variation in accretion being responsible for the
  scatter. Putting our data into the broader literature context, we find
  that ionized and atomic+molecular velocity dispersions evolve similarly
  with redshift, with the ionized gas dispersion being ∼10-15 km
  s<SUP>-1</SUP> higher on average. We investigate the physical driver of
  the on average elevated velocity dispersions at higher redshift and find
  that our galaxies are at most marginally Toomre-stable, suggesting that
  their turbulent velocities are powered by gravitational instabilities,
  while stellar feedback as a driver alone is insufficient. This picture
  is supported through comparison with a state-of-the-art analytical
  model of galaxy evolution. <P />Based on observations collected at
  the Very Large Telescope (VLT) of the European Southern Observatory
  (ESO), Paranal, Chile, under ESO program IDs 092.A-0091, 093.A-0079,
  094.A-0217, 095.A-0047, 096.A-0025, 097.A-0028, 098.A-0045, 099.A-0013,
  0100.A-0039, and 0101.A-0022.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Structure and dynamics of the hot flaring loop-top source
    observed by Hinode, SDO, RHESSI, and STEREO
Authors: Lee, Kyoung-Sun; Hara, Hirohisa; Watanabe, Kyoko; Joshi,
   Anand D.; Imada, Shinsuke; Brooks, David H.; Dang, Phillip; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Savage, Sabrina
2019AAS...23421605L    Altcode:
  We have investigated an M1.3 flare on 2014 January 13 around
  21:48 UT observed at the west limb using the Hinode, SDO, RHESSI,
  and STEREO. Especially, the Hinode/EIS scanned the flaring loop
  covering the loop-top region over the limb, which is a good target to
  investigate the dynamics of the flaring loop with their height. Using
  the multi-wavelength observations from the Hinode/EIS and SDO/AIA,
  we found a very hot emission above the loop-top observed in Fe XXIV
  and 131Å channel. Measuring the intensity, Doppler velocity and line
  width for the flaring loop, we found that hot emission observed at
  the cusp-like shape of the loop-top region which shows strong redshift
  about 500 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> in Doppler velocity and strong enhancement
  of the non-thermal velocity (line width enhancement) larger than 100
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. Combining with the STEREO observation, we have
  examined the 3D structure with loop tilt angle and have investigated
  the velocity distribution of the loop-top region. With the loop tilt
  angle, we could identify the strong redshift at the loop-top region
  may indicate an up-flow along the loop-top region. From RHESSI hard
  X-ray (HXR), and soft X-ray (SXR) emission, we found that the footpoint
  brightening region at the beginning of the flare has a both HXR (25-50
  keV) and SXR (12-25 keV) emission in which imply that the region has
  non-thermal emission or accelerated particles. Then, within 10 minutes
  the soft X-ray (SXR) emission observed near the cusp shape region at
  loop top. The temporal variation of the HXR and SXR emissions and the
  Doppler velocity variation of the hot plasma component at the loop-top
  imply that the strong flow in a hot component near loop-top could be
  the evaporation flows which detected at the corona along the tilted
  loop. Moreover, The temporal evolution of the temperature observed
  by SDO/AIA and Hinode/EIS also shows the cooling process of the flare
  plasma which is consistent with the impulsively heated flare model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Comparison of Scattering Polarization Signals Observed by
CLASP: Possible Indication of the Hanle Effect
Authors: Ishikawa, R.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Uitenbroek, H.; Kubo, M.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Goto, M.; Kano, R.; Narukage, N.; Bando, T.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Ishikawa, S.; Giono, G.; Suematsu, Y.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.;
   Sakao, T.; Winebarger, A.; Kobayashi, K.; Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.;
   Auchère, F.; Štěpán, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Asensio Ramos, A.; Manso
   Sainz, R.; De Pomtieu, B.; Ichimoto, K.; Carlsson, M.; Casini, R.
2019ASPC..526..305I    Altcode:
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP; Kano et
  al. 2012; Kobayashi et al. 2012; Kubo et al. 2014) observed, for the
  first time, the linear polarization produced by scattering processes
  in the hydrogen Lyman-α (121.57 nm) and Si III (120.56 nm) lines of
  the solar disk radiation. The complexity of the observed scattering
  polarization (i.e., conspicuous spatial variations in Q/I and U/I
  at spatial scales of 10″-20″ and the absence of center-to- limb
  variation at the Lyman-α center; see Kano et al. 2017) motivated us
  to search for possible hints of the operation of the Hanle effect by
  comparing: (a) the Lyman-α line center signal, for which the critical
  field strength (B<SUB>H</SUB>) for the onset of the Hanle effect is
  53 G, (b) the Lyman-α wing, which is insensitive to the Hanle effect,
  and (c) the Si III line, whose B<SUB>H</SUB> = 290 G. We focus on four
  regions with different total unsigned photospheric magnetic fluxes
  (estimated from SDO/HMI observations), and compare the corresponding
  U/I spatial variations in the Lyman-α wing, Lyman-α center, and Si III
  line. The U/I signal in the Lyman-α wing shows an antisymmetric spatial
  distribution, which is caused by the presence of a bright structure in
  all the selected regions, regardless of the total unsigned photospheric
  magnetic flux. In an internetwork region, the Lyman-α center shows an
  antisymmetric spatial variation across the selected bright structure,
  but it does not show it in other more magnetized regions. In the Si III
  line, the spatial variation of U/I deviates from the above-mentioned
  antisymmetric shape as the total unsigned photospheric magnetic flux
  increases. We argue that a plausible explanation of this differential
  behavior is the operation of the Hanle effect. <P />This work, presented
  in an oral contribution at this Workshop, has been published on The
  Astrophysical Journal (Ishikawa et al. 2017).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> Survey: Demographics and Properties of
    Galactic Outflows at z = 0.6-2.7
Authors: Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Übler, H.; Davies, R. L.;
   Genzel, R.; Wisnioski, E.; Belli, S.; Shimizu, T.; Lutz, D.; Fossati,
   M.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Mendel, J. T.; Tacconi, L. J.; Wilman, D.;
   Beifiori, A.; Brammer, G. B.; Burkert, A.; Carollo, C. M.; Davies,
   R. I.; Eisenhauer, F.; Fabricius, M.; Lilly, S. J.; Momcheva, I.; Naab,
   T.; Nelson, E. J.; Price, S. H.; Renzini, A.; Saglia, R.; Sternberg,
   A.; van Dokkum, P.; Wuyts, S.
2019ApJ...875...21F    Altcode: 2018arXiv180704738F
  We present a census of ionized gas outflows in 599 normal galaxies
  at redshift 0.6 &lt; z &lt; 2.7, mostly based on integral field
  spectroscopy of Hα, [N II], and [S II] line emission. The sample
  fairly homogeneously covers the main sequence of star-forming galaxies
  with masses 9.0 &lt; log(M <SUB>*</SUB>/M <SUB>⊙</SUB>) &lt; 11.7,
  and probes into the regimes of quiescent galaxies and starburst
  outliers. About one-third exhibits the high-velocity component
  indicative of outflows, roughly equally split into winds driven by star
  formation (SF) and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). The incidence of
  SF-driven winds correlates mainly with SF properties. These outflows
  have typical velocities of ∼450 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, local electron
  densities of n <SUB>e</SUB> ∼ 380 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, modest mass loading
  factors of ∼0.1-0.2 at all galaxy masses, and energetics compatible
  with momentum driving by young stellar populations. The SF-driven winds
  may escape from log(M <SUB>*</SUB>/M <SUB>⊙</SUB>) ≲ 10.3 galaxies,
  but substantial mass, momentum, and energy in hotter and colder outflow
  phases seem required to account for low galaxy formation efficiencies
  in the low-mass regime. Faster AGN-driven outflows (∼1000-2000 km
  s<SUP>-1</SUP>) are commonly detected above log(M <SUB>*</SUB>/M
  <SUB>⊙</SUB>) ∼ 10.7, in up to ∼75% of log(M <SUB>*</SUB>/M
  <SUB>⊙</SUB>) ≳ 11.2 galaxies. The incidence, strength, and
  velocity of AGN-driven winds strongly correlates with stellar mass and
  central concentration. Their outflowing ionized gas appears denser
  (n <SUB>e</SUB> ∼ 1000 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>), and possibly compressed
  and shock-excited. These winds have comparable mass loading factors
  as the SF-driven winds but carry ∼10 (∼50) times more momentum
  (energy). The results confirm our previous findings of high-duty-cycle,
  energy-driven outflows powered by AGN above the Schechter mass, which
  may contribute to SF quenching. <P />Based on observations obtained
  at the Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory,
  Paranal, Chile (ESO program IDs 073.B-9018, 074.A-9011, 075.A-0466,
  076.A-0527, 077.A-0527, 078.A-0600, 079.A-0341, 080.A-0330, 080.A-0339,
  080.A-0635, 081.A-0672, 081.B-0568, 082.A-0396, 183.A-0781, 087.A-0081,
  088.A-0202, 088.A-0209, 090.A-0516, 091.A-0126, 092.A-0082, 092.A-0091,
  093.A-0079, 093.A-0110, 093.A-0233, 094.A-0217, 094.A-0568, 095.A-0047,
  096.A-0025, 097.A-0028, 098.A-0045, 099.A-0013, 0100.A-0039). Also based
  on observations taken at the Large Binocular Telescope on Mt. Graham
  in Arizona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Kiloparsec Scale Properties of Star Formation Driven Outflows
    at z ∼ 2.3 in the SINS/zC-SINF AO Survey
Authors: Davies, R. L.; Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Übler, H.; Genzel,
   R.; Lutz, D.; Renzini, A.; Tacchella, S.; Tacconi, L. J.; Belli, S.;
   Burkert, A.; Carollo, C. M.; Davies, R. I.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Lilly,
   S. J.; Mancini, C.; Naab, T.; Nelson, E. J.; Price, S. H.; Shimizu,
   T. T.; Sternberg, A.; Wisnioski, E.; Wuyts, S.
2019ApJ...873..122D    Altcode: 2018arXiv180810700D
  We investigate the relationship between star formation activity and
  outflow properties on kiloparsec scales in a sample of 28 star-forming
  galaxies at z ∼ 2-2.6, using adaptive optics assisted integral field
  observations from SINFONI on the Very Large Telescope. The narrow
  and broad components of the Hα emission are used to simultaneously
  determine the local star formation rate surface density ({{{Σ
  }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>}), and the outflow velocity {v}<SUB>out</SUB>}
  and mass outflow rate {\dot{M}}<SUB>out</SUB>}, respectively. We find
  clear evidence for faster outflows with larger mass loading factors
  at higher {{{Σ }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>}. The outflow velocities scale as
  {v}<SUB>out</SUB>} ∝ {{{Σ }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>} <SUP>0.34±0.10</SUP>,
  which suggests that the outflows may be driven by a combination of
  mechanical energy released by supernova explosions and stellar winds,
  as well as radiation pressure acting on dust grains. The majority of
  the outflowing material does not have sufficient velocity to escape
  from the galaxy halos, but will likely be re-accreted and contribute
  to the chemical enrichment of the galaxies. In the highest {{{Σ
  }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>} regions the outflow component contains an average
  of ∼45% of the Hα flux, while in the lower {{{Σ }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>}
  regions only ∼10% of the Hα flux is associated with outflows. The
  mass loading factor, η = {\dot{M}}<SUB>out</SUB>}/SFR, is positively
  correlated with {{{Σ }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>} but is relatively low
  even at the highest {{{Σ }}}<SUB>SFR</SUB>}: η ≲ 0.5 ×
  (380 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>/n <SUB> e </SUB>). This may be in tension
  with the η ≳ 1 required by cosmological simulations, unless a
  significant fraction of the outflowing mass is in other gas phases
  and has sufficient velocity to escape the galaxy halos. <P />Based on
  observations collected at the European Organisation for Astronomical
  Research in the Southern Hemisphere under ESO Programme IDs 075.A-0466,
  079.A-0341, 080.A-0330, 080.A-0339, 080.A-0635, 081.A-0672, 081.B-0568,
  183.A-0781, 087.A-0081, and 088.A-0209.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey. XI. The Covering Factor of Dust
    and Gas in Swift/BAT Active Galactic Nuclei
Authors: Ichikawa, Kohei; Ricci, Claudio; Ueda, Yoshihiro; Bauer,
   Franz E.; Kawamuro, Taiki; Koss, Michael J.; Oh, Kyuseok; Rosario,
   David J.; Shimizu, T. Taro; Stalevski, Marko; Fuller, Lindsay; Packham,
   Christopher; Trakhtenbrot, Benny
2019ApJ...870...31I    Altcode: 2018arXiv181102568I
  We quantify the luminosity contribution of active galactic nuclei
  (AGNs) to the 12 μm, mid-infrared (MIR; 5-38 μm), and total IR
  (5-1000 μm) emission in the local AGNs detected in the all-sky 70
  month Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) ultrahard X-ray survey. We
  decompose the IR spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 587 objects
  into the AGN and starburst components using templates for an AGN
  torus and a star-forming galaxy. This enables us to recover the
  emission from the AGN torus including the low-luminosity end, down
  to {log}({L}<SUB>14-150</SUB>/{erg} {{{s}}}<SUP>-1</SUP>)≃ 41,
  which typically has significant host galaxy contamination. The
  sample demonstrates that the luminosity contribution of the AGN
  to the 12 μm, the MIR, and the total IR bands is an increasing
  function of the 14-150 keV luminosity. We also find that for the
  most extreme cases, the IR pure-AGN emission from the torus can
  extend up to 90 μm. The total IR AGN luminosity obtained through
  the IR SED decomposition enables us to estimate the fraction
  of the sky obscured by dust, i.e., the dust covering factor. We
  demonstrate that the median dust covering factor is always smaller
  than the median X-ray obscuration fraction above an AGN bolometric
  luminosity of {log}({L}<SUB>bol</SUB>}<SUP>({AGN</SUP>)}/{erg}
  {{{s}}}<SUP>-1</SUP>)≃ 42.5. Considering that the X-ray obscuration
  fraction is equivalent to the covering factor coming from both the
  dust and gas, this indicates that an additional neutral gas component,
  along with the dusty torus, is responsible for the absorption of
  X-ray emission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Molecular and Ionized Gas Phases of an AGN-driven Outflow in
    a Typical Massive Galaxy at z ≈ 2
Authors: Herrera-Camus, R.; Tacconi, L.; Genzel, R.; Förster
   Schreiber, N.; Lutz, D.; Bolatto, A.; Wuyts, S.; Renzini, A.; Lilly,
   S.; Belli, S.; Übler, H.; Shimizu, T.; Davies, R.; Sturm, E.; Combes,
   F.; Freundlich, J.; García-Burillo, S.; Cox, P.; Burkert, A.; Naab,
   T.; Colina, L.; Saintonge, A.; Cooper, M.; Feruglio, C.; Weiss, A.
2019ApJ...871...37H    Altcode: 2018arXiv180707074H
  Nuclear outflows driven by accreting massive black holes are one of the
  main feedback mechanisms invoked at high-z to reproduce the distinct
  separation between star-forming disk galaxies and quiescent spheroidal
  systems. Yet our knowledge of feedback at high-z remains limited by the
  lack of observations of the multiple gas phases in galaxy outflows. In
  this work, we use new deep, high spatial resolution ALMA CO(3-2)
  and archival Very Large Telescope/SINFONI Hα observations to study
  the molecular and ionized components of the active galactic nucleus
  (AGN)-driven outflow in zC400528, a massive main-sequence galaxy at
  z = 2.3 in the process of quenching. We detect a powerful molecular
  outflow that shows a positive velocity gradient before a turnover
  and extends for at least ∼10 kpc from the nuclear region, about
  three times the projected size of the ionized wind. The molecular
  gas in the outflow does not reach velocities high enough to escape
  the galaxy and is therefore expected to be reaccreted. Keeping in
  mind the various assumptions involved in the analysis, we find that
  the mass and energetics of the outflow are dominated by the molecular
  phase. The AGN-driven outflow in zC400528 is powerful enough to deplete
  the molecular gas reservoir on a timescale comparable to that needed to
  exhaust it by star formation. This suggests that the nuclear outflow is
  one of the main quenching engines at work in the observed suppression
  of the central star formation activity in zC400528.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Study of the polarization produced by the Zeeman effect in
    the solar Mg I b lines
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Uitenbroek, H.; Carlsson, M.; Orozco
   Suárez, D.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Kubo, M.; Oba,
   T.; Kawabata, Y.; Hasegawa, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Anan, T.; Suematsu, Y.
2018MNRAS.481.5675Q    Altcode: 2018arXiv181001067Q; 2018MNRAS.tmp.2566Q
  The next generation of solar observatories aim to understand the
  magnetism of the solar chromosphere. Therefore, it is crucial to
  understand the polarimetric signatures of chromospheric spectral
  lines. For this purpose, we here examine the suitability of the three
  Fraunhofer Mg I b<SUB>1</SUB>, b<SUB>2</SUB>, and b<SUB>4</SUB> lines
  at 5183.6, 5172.7, and 5167.3 Å, respectively. We start by describing
  a simplified atomic model of only six levels and three line transitions
  for computing the atomic populations of the 3p-4s (multiplet number
  2) levels involved in the Mg I b line transitions assuming non-local
  thermodynamic conditions and considering only the Zeeman effect using
  the field-free approximation. We test this simplified atom against
  more complex ones finding that, although there are differences in the
  computed profiles, they are small compared with the advantages provided
  by the simple atom in terms of speed and robustness. After comparing
  the three Mg I lines, we conclude that the most capable one is the
  b<SUB>2</SUB> line as b<SUB>1</SUB> forms at similar heights and always
  shows weaker polarization signals, while b<SUB>4</SUB> is severely
  blended with photospheric lines. We also compare Mg I b<SUB>2</SUB>
  with the K I D<SUB>1</SUB> and Ca II 8542 Å lines finding that the
  former is sensitive to the atmospheric parameters at heights that
  are in between those covered by the latter two lines. This makes Mg I
  b<SUB>2</SUB> an excellent candidate for future multiline observations
  that aim to seamlessly infer the thermal and magnetic properties of
  different features in the lower solar atmosphere.

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Title: Statistical Relation between Solar Flares and Coronal Mass
    Ejections with Respect to Sigmoidal Structures in Active Regions
Authors: Kawabata, Yusuke; Iida, Yusuke; Doi, Takafumi; Akiyama,
   Sachiko; Yashiro, Seiji; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2018ApJ...869...99K    Altcode: 2018arXiv181010808K
  Statistical dependences among features of coronal mass ejections
  (CMEs), solar flares, and sigmoidal structures in soft-X-ray images
  were investigated. We applied analysis methods to all the features
  in the same way in order to investigate the reproducibility of
  the correlations among them, which may be found from previous
  statistical studies. Samples of 211 M-class and X-class flares,
  observed between 2006 and 2015 by the Hinode/X-ray telescope, Solar and
  Heliospheric Observatory/Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph,
  and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite, were examined
  statistically. Five kinds of analysis were performed: occurrence
  rate analysis, linear-correlation analysis, association analysis,
  the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and the Anderson-Darling test. These give
  three main results. First, the sigmoidal structure and long-duration
  events (LDEs) have a stronger dependence on CME occurrence than large
  X-ray-class events in on-disk events. Second, for the limb events,
  a significant dependence exists between LDEs and CME occurrence,
  and between X-ray-class events and CME occurrence. Third, 32.4% of
  on-disk flare events have sigmoidal structure and are not accompanied
  by CMEs. However, the occurrence probability of CMEs without sigmoidal
  structure is very small, 8.8%, in on-disk events. While the first and
  second results are consistent with previous studies, we provide for
  the first time a difference between the on-disk and limb events. The
  third result, that non-sigmoidal regions produce fewer eruptive events,
  is also different from previous results. We suggest that sigmoidal
  structures in soft X-ray images will be a helpful feature for CME
  prediction in on-disk flare events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flare-related Recurring Active Region Jets: Evidence for Very
    Hot Plasma
Authors: Mulay, Sargam M.; Matthews, Sarah; Hasegawa, Takahiro;
   Del Zanna, Giulio; Mason, Helen; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2018SoPh..293..160M    Altcode:
  We present a study of two active region jets (AR jets) that are
  associated with two C-class X-ray flares. The recurrent, homologous
  jets originated from the northern periphery of a sunspot. We
  confirm flare-like temperatures at the footpoints of these jets using
  spectroscopic observations of Fe XXIII (263.76 Å) and Fe XXIV (255.11
  Å) emission lines. The emission measure loci method was used to obtain
  an isothermal temperature, and the results show a decrease (17.7 to 13.6
  MK) in the temperature during the decay phase of the C 3.0 flare. The
  electron number densities at the footpoints were found to range from
  1.7 ×10<SUP>10</SUP> to 2.0 ×10<SUP>11</SUP>cm−<SUP>3</SUP> using
  the Fe XIV line pair ratio. Nonthermal velocities were found to range
  from 34 - 100 km/s for Fe XXIV and 51 - 89 km/s for Fe XXIII. The
  plane-of-sky velocities were calculated to be 462 ±21 and 228 ±23
  km/s for the two jets using the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA)
  171 Å channel. The AIA light curves of the jet footpoint regions
  confirmed the temporal and spatial correlation between the two X-ray
  flares and the jet footpoint emission. The Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM)
  also confirmed superhot plasma of 27 (25) MK with a nonthermal energy
  of 2.38 ×10<SUP>26</SUP> (2.87 ×10<SUP>27</SUP>) ergs−<SUP>1</SUP>
  in the jet footpoint region during the rise (peak) phase of one of the
  flares. The temperatures of the jet footpoint regions obtained from
  EIS agree very well (within an uncertainty of 20%) with temperatures
  obtained from the Geostationary Environmental Operational Satellite
  (GOES) flux ratios. These results provide clear evidence for very hot
  plasma (&gt;10 MK) at the footpoints of the flare-related jets, and
  they confirm the heating and cooling of the plasma during the flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Witnessing the Early Growth and Life Cycle of Galaxies with
    KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP>
Authors: Förster Schreiber, N. M.; Wilman, D.; Wisnioski, E. S.;
   Fossati, M.; Mendel, J. T.; Bender, R.; Genzel, R.; Beifiori, A.;
   Belli, S.; Brammer, G.; Burkert, A.; Chan, J.; Davies, R. I.; Davies,
   R. L.; Fabricius, M.; Galametz, A.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Lang, P.; Lutz,
   D.; Momcheva, I.; Naab, T.; Nelson, E. J.; Price, S. H.; Renzini, A.;
   Saglia, R.; Seitz, S.; Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Tacconi, L. J.;
   Tadaki, K. -i.; Übler, H.; van Dokkum, P. G.; Wuyts, S.
2018Msngr.174...28S    Altcode:
  Near-infrared integral field unit (IFU) spectrographs are powerful
  tools for investigating galaxy evolution. We report on our recently
  completed multi- year KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> survey of Hα, [N II] and
  [SII] line emission of galaxies at redshift z 0.7-2.7 with the
  K-band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS) at the Very Large Telescope
  (VLT). With deep observations of 745 targets spanning over two orders
  of magnitude in galaxy mass, five billion years of cosmic time, and all
  levels of star formation, KMOS<SUP>3D</SUP> provides an unparalleled
  population-wide census of spatially-resolved kinematics, star formation,
  outflows and nebular gas conditions. The dataset sheds new light on the
  physical mechanisms driving the early growth and lifecycle of galaxies,
  and provides a rich legacy for the astronomical community.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The LiteBIRD Satellite Mission: Sub-Kelvin Instrument
Authors: Suzuki, A.; Ade, P. A. R.; Akiba, Y.; Alonso, D.; Arnold,
   K.; Aumont, J.; Baccigalupi, C.; Barron, D.; Basak, S.; Beckman,
   S.; Borrill, J.; Boulanger, F.; Bucher, M.; Calabrese, E.; Chinone,
   Y.; Cho, S.; Crill, B.; Cukierman, A.; Curtis, D. W.; de Haan, T.;
   Dobbs, M.; Dominjon, A.; Dotani, T.; Duband, L.; Ducout, A.; Dunkley,
   J.; Duval, J. M.; Elleflot, T.; Eriksen, H. K.; Errard, J.; Fischer,
   J.; Fujino, T.; Funaki, T.; Fuskeland, U.; Ganga, K.; Goeckner-Wald,
   N.; Grain, J.; Halverson, N. W.; Hamada, T.; Hasebe, T.; Hasegawa,
   M.; Hattori, K.; Hattori, M.; Hayes, L.; Hazumi, M.; Hidehira, N.;
   Hill, C. A.; Hilton, G.; Hubmayr, J.; Ichiki, K.; Iida, T.; Imada, H.;
   Inoue, M.; Inoue, Y.; Irwin, K. D.; Ishino, H.; Jeong, O.; Kanai, H.;
   Kaneko, D.; Kashima, S.; Katayama, N.; Kawasaki, T.; Kernasovskiy,
   S. A.; Keskitalo, R.; Kibayashi, A.; Kida, Y.; Kimura, K.; Kisner,
   T.; Kohri, K.; Komatsu, E.; Komatsu, K.; Kuo, C. L.; Kurinsky, N. A.;
   Kusaka, A.; Lazarian, A.; Lee, A. T.; Li, D.; Linder, E.; Maffei,
   B.; Mangilli, A.; Maki, M.; Matsumura, T.; Matsuura, S.; Meilhan, D.;
   Mima, S.; Minami, Y.; Mitsuda, K.; Montier, L.; Nagai, M.; Nagasaki,
   T.; Nagata, R.; Nakajima, M.; Nakamura, S.; Namikawa, T.; Naruse,
   M.; Nishino, H.; Nitta, T.; Noguchi, T.; Ogawa, H.; Oguri, S.; Okada,
   N.; Okamoto, A.; Okamura, T.; Otani, C.; Patanchon, G.; Pisano, G.;
   Rebeiz, G.; Remazeilles, M.; Richards, P. L.; Sakai, S.; Sakurai, Y.;
   Sato, Y.; Sato, N.; Sawada, M.; Segawa, Y.; Sekimoto, Y.; Seljak, U.;
   Sherwin, B. D.; Shimizu, T.; Shinozaki, K.; Stompor, R.; Sugai, H.;
   Sugita, H.; Suzuki, J.; Tajima, O.; Takada, S.; Takaku, R.; Takakura,
   S.; Takatori, S.; Tanabe, D.; Taylor, E.; Thompson, K. L.; Thorne, B.;
   Tomaru, T.; Tomida, T.; Tomita, N.; Tristram, M.; Tucker, C.; Turin,
   P.; Tsujimoto, M.; Uozumi, S.; Utsunomiya, S.; Uzawa, Y.; Vansyngel,
   F.; Wehus, I. K.; Westbrook, B.; Willer, M.; Whitehorn, N.; Yamada,
   Y.; Yamamoto, R.; Yamasaki, N.; Yamashita, T.; Yoshida, M.
2018JLTP..193.1048S    Altcode: 2018JLTP..tmp..124S; 2018arXiv180106987S
  Inflation is the leading theory of the first instant of the
  universe. Inflation, which postulates that the universe underwent
  a period of rapid expansion an instant after its birth, provides
  convincing explanation for cosmological observations. Recent
  advancements in detector technology have opened opportunities to
  explore primordial gravitational waves generated by the inflation
  through "B-mode" (divergent-free) polarization pattern embedded in the
  cosmic microwave background anisotropies. If detected, these signals
  would provide strong evidence for inflation, point to the correct
  model for inflation, and open a window to physics at ultra-high
  energies. LiteBIRD is a satellite mission with a goal of detecting
  degree-and-larger-angular-scale B-mode polarization. LiteBIRD will
  observe at the second Lagrange point with a 400 mm diameter telescope
  and 2622 detectors. It will survey the entire sky with 15 frequency
  bands from 40 to 400 GHz to measure and subtract foregrounds. The
  US LiteBIRD team is proposing to deliver sub-Kelvin instruments
  that include detectors and readout electronics. A lenslet-coupled
  sinuous antenna array will cover low-frequency bands (40-235
  GHz) with four frequency arrangements of trichroic pixels. An
  orthomode-transducer-coupled corrugated horn array will cover
  high-frequency bands (280-402 GHz) with three types of single frequency
  detectors. The detectors will be made with transition edge sensor
  (TES) bolometers cooled to a 100 milli-Kelvin base temperature by an
  adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator. The TES bolometers will be read
  out using digital frequency multiplexing with Superconducting QUantum
  Interference Device (SQUID) amplifiers. Up to 78 bolometers will be
  multiplexed with a single SQUID amplifier. We report on the sub-Kelvin
  instrument design and ongoing developments for the LiteBIRD mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First high-resolution look at the quiet Sun with ALMA at 3mm
Authors: Nindos, A.; Alissandrakis, C. E.; Bastian, T. S.; Patsourakos,
   S.; De Pontieu, B.; Warren, H.; Ayres, T.; Hudson, H. S.; Shimizu,
   T.; Vial, J. -C.; Wedemeyer, S.; Yurchyshyn, V.
2018A&A...619L...6N    Altcode: 2018arXiv181005223N
  We present an overview of high-resolution quiet Sun observations,
  from disk center to the limb, obtained with the Atacama Large
  millimeter and sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) at 3 mm. Seven quiet-Sun
  regions were observed at a resolution of up to 2.5″ by 4.5″. We
  produced both average and snapshot images by self-calibrating the ALMA
  visibilities and combining the interferometric images with full-disk
  solar images. The images show well the chromospheric network, which,
  based on the unique segregation method we used, is brighter than the
  average over the fields of view of the observed regions by ∼305
  K while the intranetwork is less bright by ∼280 K, with a slight
  decrease of the network/intranetwork contrast toward the limb. At 3
  mm the network is very similar to the 1600 Å images, with somewhat
  larger size. We detect, for the first time, spicular structures,
  rising up to 15″ above the limb with a width down to the image
  resolution and brightness temperature of ∼1800 K above the local
  background. No trace of spicules, either in emission or absorption,
  is found on the disk. Our results highlight the potential of ALMA for
  the study of the quiet chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: CLASP Constraints on the Magnetization and Geometrical
    Complexity of the Chromosphere-Corona Transition Region
Authors: Trujillo Bueno, J.; Štěpán, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Asensio
   Ramos, A.; Manso Sainz, R.; del Pino Alemán, T.; Casini, R.; Ishikawa,
   R.; Kano, R.; Winebarger, A.; Auchère, F.; Narukage, N.; Kobayashi,
   K.; Bando, T.; Katsukawa, Y.; Kubo, M.; Ishikawa, S.; Giono, G.; Hara,
   H.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.; De Pontieu, B.; Carlsson, M.
2018ApJ...866L..15T    Altcode: 2018arXiv180908865T
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) is a
  suborbital rocket experiment that on 2015 September 3 measured
  the linear polarization produced by scattering processes in the
  hydrogen Lyα line of the solar disk radiation. The line-center
  photons of this spectral line radiation mostly stem from the
  chromosphere-corona transition region (TR). These unprecedented
  spectropolarimetric observations revealed an interesting surprise,
  namely that there is practically no center-to-limb variation (CLV) in
  the Q/I line-center signals. Using an analytical model, we first show
  that the geometric complexity of the corrugated surface that delineates
  the TR has a crucial impact on the CLV of the Q/I and U/I line-center
  signals. Second, we introduce a statistical description of the solar
  atmosphere based on a 3D model derived from a state-of-the-art radiation
  magnetohydrodynamic simulation. Each realization of the statistical
  ensemble is a 3D model characterized by a given degree of magnetization
  and corrugation of the TR, and for each such realization we solve the
  full 3D radiative transfer problem taking into account the impact
  of the CLASP instrument degradation on the calculated polarization
  signals. Finally, we apply the statistical inference method presented
  in a previous paper to show that the TR of the 3D model that produces
  the best agreement with the CLASP observations has a relatively weak
  magnetic field and a relatively high degree of corrugation. We emphasize
  that a suitable way to validate or refute numerical models of the upper
  solar chromosphere is by confronting calculations and observations
  of the scattering polarization in ultraviolet lines sensitive to the
  Hanle effect.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey - XII. The relation between
    coronal properties of active galactic nuclei and the Eddington ratio
Authors: Ricci, C.; Ho, L. C.; Fabian, A. C.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Koss,
   M. J.; Ueda, Y.; Lohfink, A.; Shimizu, T.; Bauer, F. E.; Mushotzky,
   R.; Schawinski, K.; Paltani, S.; Lamperti, I.; Treister, E.; Oh, K.
2018MNRAS.480.1819R    Altcode: 2018MNRAS.tmp.1793R; 2018arXiv180904076R
  The bulk of the X-ray emission in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is
  produced very close to the accreting supermassive black hole (SMBH),
  in a corona of hot electrons which up scatters optical and ultraviolet
  photons from the accretion flow. The cut-off energy (E<SUB>C</SUB>) of
  the primary X-ray continuum emission carries important information on
  the physical characteristics of the X-ray emitting plasma, but little
  is currently known about its potential relation with the properties
  of accreting SMBHs. Using the largest broad-band (0.3-150 keV) X-ray
  spectroscopic study available to date, we investigate how the corona
  is related to the AGN luminosity, black hole mass and Eddington
  ratio (λ<SUB>Edd</SUB>). Assuming a slab corona the median values
  of the temperature and optical depth of the Comptonizing plasma are
  kT<SUB>e</SUB> = 105 ± 18 keV and τ = 0.25 ± 0.06, respectively. When
  we properly account for the large number of E<SUB>C</SUB> lower limits,
  we find a statistically significant dependence of the cut-off energy on
  the Eddington ratio. In particular, objects with λ<SUB>Edd</SUB> &gt;
  0.1 have a significantly lower median cut-off energy (E<SUB>C</SUB> =
  160 ± 41 keV) than those with λ<SUB>Edd</SUB> ≤ 0.1 (E<SUB>C</SUB>
  = 370 ± 51 keV). This is consistent with the idea that radiatively
  compact coronae are also cooler, because they tend to avoid the region
  in the temperature-compactness parameter space where runaway pair
  production would dominate. We show that this behaviour could also
  straightforwardly explain the suggested positive correlation between
  the photon index (Γ) and the Eddington ratio, being able to reproduce
  the observed slope of the Γ-λ<SUB>Edd</SUB> trend.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Statistical Inference Method for Interpreting the CLASP
    Observations
Authors: Štěpán, J.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Asensio
   Ramos, A.; Manso Sainz, R.; del Pino Alemán, T.; Casini, R.; Kano, R.;
   Winebarger, A.; Auchère, F.; Ishikawa, R.; Narukage, N.; Kobayashi,
   K.; Bando, T.; Katsukawa, Y.; Kubo, M.; Ishikawa, S.; Giono, G.; Hara,
   H.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.; De Pontieu, B.; Carlsson, M.
2018ApJ...865...48S    Altcode: 2018arXiv180802725S
  On 2015 September 3, the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha SpectroPolarimeter
  (CLASP) successfully measured the linear polarization produced by
  scattering processes in the hydrogen Lyα line of the solar disk
  radiation, revealing conspicuous spatial variations in the Q/I and U/I
  signals. Via the Hanle effect, the line-center Q/I and U/I amplitudes
  encode information on the magnetic field of the chromosphere-corona
  transition region, but they are also sensitive to the three-dimensional
  structure of this corrugated interface region. With the help of a simple
  line-formation model, here we propose a statistical inference method
  for interpreting the Lyα line-center polarization observed by CLASP.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter (SCIP)
    for the SUNRISE balloon-borne solar observatory
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Hara, Hirohisa;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Kubo, Masahito; Barthol,
   Peter; Riethmueller, Tino; Gandorfer, Achim; Feller, Alex; Orozco
   Suárez, David; Del Toro Iniesta, Jose Carlos; Kano, Ryouhei; Ishikawa,
   Shin-nosuke; Ishikawa, Ryohko; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Uraguchi, Fumihiro;
   Quintero Noda, Carlos; Tamura, Tomonori; Oba, Takayoshi; Kawabata,
   Yusuke; Nagata, Shinichi; Anan, Tetsu; Cobos Carrascosa, Juan Pedro;
   Lopez Jimenez, Antonio Carlos; Balaguer Jimenez, Maria; Solanki, Sami
2018cosp...42E3285S    Altcode:
  The SUNRISE balloon-borne solar observatory carries a 1 m aperture
  optical telescope, and allows us to perform seeing-free continuous
  observations at visible-IR wavelengths from an altitude higher than
  35 km. In the past two flights, in 2009 and 2013, observations mainly
  focused on fine structures of photospheric magnetic fields. For the
  third flight planned for 2021, we are developing a new instrument
  for conducting spectro-polarimetry of spectral lines formed over a
  larger height range in the solar atmosphere from the photosphere to
  the chromosphere. Targets of the spectro-polarimetric observation
  are (1) to determine 3D magnetic structure from the photosphere to
  the chromosphere, (2) to trace MHD waves from the photosphere to the
  chromosphere, and (3) to reveal the mechanism driving chromospheric
  jets, by measuring height- and time-dependent velocities and magnetic
  fields. To achieve these goals, a spectro-polarimeter called SCIP
  (Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectroPolarimeter) is designed to
  observe near-infrared spectrum lines sensitive to solar magnetic
  fields. The spatial and spectral resolutions are 0.2 arcsec and
  200,000, respectively, while 0.03% polarimetric sensitivity is
  achieved within a 10 sec integration time. The optical system employs
  an Echelle grating and off-axis aspheric mirrors to observe the two
  wavelength ranges centered at 850 nm and 770 nm simultaneously by
  two cameras. Polarimetric measurements are performed using a rotating
  waveplate and polarization beam-splitters in front of the cameras. For
  detecting minute polarization signals with good precision, we carefully
  assess the temperature dependence of polarization optics, and make
  the opto-structural design that minimizes the thermal deformation
  of the spectrograph optics. Another key technique is to attain good
  (better than 30 msec) synchronization among the rotating phase of
  the waveplate, read-out timing of cameras, and step timing of a
  slit-scanning mirror. On-board accumulation and data processing are
  also critical because we cannot store all the raw data read-out from the
  cameras. We demonstrate that we can reduce the data down to almost 10%
  with loss-less image compression and without sacrificing polarimetric
  information in the data. The SCIP instrument is developed by internal
  collaboration among Japanese institutes including Japan Aerospace
  Exploration Agency (JAXA), the Spanish Sunrise consortium, and the
  German Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) with a
  leadership of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Current State of UV Spectro-Polarimetry and its Future
    Direction
Authors: Ishikawa, Ryohko; Sakao, Taro; Katsukawa, Yukio; Hara,
   Hirohisa; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Kubo, Masahito;
   Auchere, Frederic; De Pontieu, Bart; Winebarger, Amy; Kobayashi,
   . Ken; Kano, Ryouhei; Narukage, Noriyuki; Trujillo Bueno, Javier;
   Song, Dong-uk; Manso Sainz, Rafael; Asensio Ramos, Andres; Leenaarts,
   Jorritt; Carlsson, Mats; Bando, Takamasa; Ishikawa, Shin-nosuke;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Belluzzi, Luca; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Giono, Gabriel;
   Yoshida, Masaki; Goto, Motoshi; Del Pino Aleman, Tanausu; Stepan,
   Jiri; Okamoto, Joten; Tsuzuki, Toshihiro; Uraguchi, Fumihiro; Champey,
   Patrick; Alsina Ballester, Ernest; Casini, Roberto; McKenzie, David;
   Rachmeler, Laurel; Bethge, Christian
2018cosp...42E1564I    Altcode:
  To obtain quantitative information on the magnetic field in low beta
  regions (i.e., upper chromosphere and above) has been increasingly
  important to understand the energetic phenomena of the outer
  solar atmosphere such as flare, coronal heating, and the solar wind
  acceleration. In the UV range, there are abundant spectral lines that
  originate in the upper chromosphere and transition region. However,
  the Zeeman effect in these spectral lines does not give rise to easily
  measurable polarization signals because of the weak magnetic field
  strength and the larger Doppler broadening compared with the Zeeman
  effect. Instead, the Hanle effect in UV lines is expected to be a
  suitable diagnostic tool of the magnetic field in the upper atmospheric
  layers. To investigate the validity of UV spectro-polarimetry and
  the Hanle effect, the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter
  (CLASP), which is a NASA sounding- rocket experiment, was launched at
  White Sands in US on September 3, 2015. During its 5 minutes ballistic
  flight, it successfully performed spectro-polarimetric observations
  of the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line (121.57 nm) with an unprecedentedly
  high polarization sensitivity of 0.1% in this wavelength range. CLASP
  observed the linear polarization produced by scattering process in VUV
  lines for the first time and detected the polarization signals which
  indicate the operation of the Hanle effect. Following the success
  of CLASP, we are confident that UV spectro-polarimetry is the way
  to proceed, and we are planning the second flight of CLASP (CLASP2:
  Chromospheric LAyer SpectroPolarimeter 2). For this second flight we
  will carry out spectro-polarimetry in the Mg II h and k lines around
  280 nm, with minimum modifications of the CLASP1 instrument. The linear
  polarization in the Mg II k line is induced by scattering processes and
  the Hanle effect, being sensitive to magnetic field strengths of 5 to 50
  G. In addition, the circular polarizations in the Mg II h and k lines
  induced by the Zeeman effect can be measurable in at least plage and
  active regions. The combination of the Hanle and Zeeman effects could
  help us to more reliably infer the magnetic fields of the upper solar
  chromosphere. CLASP2 was selected for flight and is being developed for
  launch in the spring of 2019.Based on these sounding rocket experiments
  (CLASP1 and 2), we aim at establishing the strategy and refining the
  instrument concept for future space missions to explore the enigmatic
  atmospheric layers via UV spectro-polarimetry.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Recommendations from the NGSPM-SOT report and mission
    opportunities in Japan
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2018tess.conf41001S    Altcode:
  A study report on the future of solar physics for the decade of
  2020 was published by the Next Generation Solar Physics Mission
  (NGSPM)'s Science Objectives Team (SOT), an advisory team consisting
  of 14 scientists, chartered by NASA, JAXA, and ESA. The report lists
  scientific objectives in all the research areas related to solar physics
  and provides priorities for next generation solar physics missions to be
  realized in the mid 2020s. The report is based on extensive reviews of
  the broad interests of the heliophysics research community, following
  a public call for white papers in the fall of 2016 which resulted
  in 34 submissions covering a wide variety of topics. Three top-level
  science objectives are identified: I) Formation mechanisms of the hot
  and dynamic outer solar atmosphere, II) Mechanisms of large-scale solar
  eruptions and foundations for predictions, and III) Mechanisms driving
  the solar cycle and irradiance variation. There are two broad avenues,
  both with distinct merits, for future research: physical mechanisms
  on elemental scales, versus global processes affecting/involving large
  fractions of the solar interior and/or atmosphere. With the resources
  available for a NGSPM in the next decade, the team chose to focus its
  recommendations on the study of fundamental physical processes at high
  spatial and temporal resolution through all temperature regimes of the
  solar atmosphere. For this study, the SOT identified a minimum set of
  , i.e., three kinds of instruments with which NGSPM can address the
  greatest number of sub-objectives and maximize the science return of the
  mission. The team recommends that these instruments be realized with
  a single platform. If the single-platform approach is not possible,
  a combination of two or three spacecraft is recommended. In response
  to the NGSPM report, the Japanese solar physics community has been
  making efforts to realize a part of such instruments in the mid
  2020s and submitted the Solar-C_EUVST mission proposal to ISAS/JAXA
  in reply to 2017 Announcement of Opportunity for competitive M-class
  mission launched by an Epsilon rocket. This mission carries an EUV
  high-throughput spectroscopic telescope (EUVST) and aims to mainly cover
  topics I) and II). This talk will briefly discuss recommendations in
  the NGSPM-SOT report and Japanese efforts to the recommendations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey. VIII. Type 1 AGN with Massive
    Absorbing Columns
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Davies, Richard I.; Koss, Michael;
   Ricci, Claudio; Lamperti, Isabella; Oh, Kyuseok; Schawinski, Kevin;
   Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Burtscher, Leonard; Genzel, Reinhard; Lin,
   Ming-yi; Lutz, Dieter; Rosario, David; Sturm, Eckhard; Tacconi, Linda
2018ApJ...856..154S    Altcode: 2017arXiv171009117S
  We explore the relationship between X-ray absorption and optical
  obscuration within the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS), which has
  been collecting and analyzing the optical and X-ray spectra for 641
  hard X-ray selected (E &gt; 14 keV) active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We
  use the deviation from a linear broad Hα-to-X-ray relationship as an
  estimate of the maximum optical obscuration toward the broad line region
  (BLR) and compare the A <SUB>V</SUB> to the hydrogen column densities
  ({N}<SUB>{{H</SUB>}}) found through systematic modeling of their X-ray
  spectra. We find that the inferred columns implied by A <SUB>V</SUB>
  toward the BLR are often orders of magnitude less than the columns
  measured toward the X-ray emitting region, indicating a small-scale
  origin for the X-ray absorbing gas. After removing 30% of Sy 1.9s that
  potentially have been misclassified due to outflows, we find that 86%
  (164/190) of the Type 1 population (Sy 1-1.9) are X-ray unabsorbed as
  expected based on a single obscuring structure. However, 14% (26/190),
  of which 70% (18/26) are classified as Sy 1.9, are X-ray absorbed,
  suggesting that the BLR itself is providing extra obscuration toward
  the X-ray corona. The fraction of X-ray absorbed Type 1 AGNs remains
  relatively constant with AGN luminosity and Eddington ratio, indicating
  a stable BLR covering fraction.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar polarimetry in the K I D<SUB>2</SUB> line : A novel
    possibility for a stratospheric balloon
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Villanueva, G. L.; Katsukawa, Y.; Solanki,
   S. K.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Shimizu, T.; Oba, T.; Kubo,
   M.; Anan, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
2018A&A...610A..79Q    Altcode: 2018arXiv180101655Q
  Of the two solar lines, K I D<SUB>1</SUB> and D<SUB>2</SUB>, almost
  all attention so far has been devoted to the D<SUB>1</SUB> line, as
  D<SUB>2</SUB> is severely affected by an O<SUB>2</SUB> atmospheric
  band. This, however, makes the latter appealing for balloon and space
  observations from above (most of) the Earth's atmosphere. We estimate
  the residual effect of the O<SUB>2</SUB> band on the K I D<SUB>2</SUB>
  line at altitudes typical for stratospheric balloons. Our aim is to
  study the feasibility of observing the 770 nm window. Specifically,
  this paper serves as a preparation for the third flight of the Sunrise
  balloon-borne observatory. The results indicate that the absorption
  by O<SUB>2</SUB> is still present, albeit much weaker, at the expected
  balloon altitude. We applied the obtained O<SUB>2</SUB> transmittance
  to K I D<SUB>2</SUB> synthetic polarimetric spectra and found that in
  the absence of line-of-sight motions, the residual O<SUB>2</SUB> has
  a negligible effect on the K I D<SUB>2</SUB> line. On the other hand,
  for Doppler-shifted K I D<SUB>2</SUB> data, the residual O<SUB>2</SUB>
  might alter the shape of the Stokes profiles. However, the residual
  O<SUB>2</SUB> absorption is sufficiently weak at stratospheric levels
  that it can be divided out if appropriate measurements are made,
  something that is impossible at ground level. Therefore, for the
  first time with Sunrise III, we will be able to perform polarimetric
  observations of the K I D<SUB>2</SUB> line and, consequently, we will
  have improved access to the thermodynamics and magnetic properties of
  the upper photosphere from observations of the K I lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LLAMA: nuclear stellar properties of Swift-BAT AGN and matched
    inactive galaxies
Authors: Lin, Ming-Yi; Davies, R. I.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Burtscher,
   L.; Contursi, A.; Genzel, R.; Koss, M.; Lutz, D.; Maciejewski, W.;
   Müller-Sánchez, F.; Orban de Xivry, G.; Ricci, C.; Riffel, R.;
   Riffel, R. A.; Rosario, D.; Schartmann, M.; Schnorr-Müller, A.;
   Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Sturm, E.; Storchi-Bergmann, T.; Tacconi,
   L.; Veilleux, S.
2018MNRAS.473.4582L    Altcode: 2017arXiv171004098L
  In a complete sample of local 14-195 keV selected active galactic nuclei
  (AGNs) and inactive galaxies, matched by their host galaxy properties,
  we study the spatially resolved stellar kinematics and luminosity
  distributions at near-infrared wavelengths on scales of 10-150 pc,
  using SINFONI on the VLT. In this paper, we present the first half of
  the sample, which comprises 13 galaxies, eight AGNs and five inactive
  galaxies. The stellar velocity fields show a disc-like rotating
  pattern, for which the kinematic position angle is in agreement with
  the photometric position angle obtained from large scale images. For
  this set of galaxies, the stellar surface brightness of the inactive
  galaxy sample is generally comparable to the matched sample of AGN,
  but extends to lower surface brightness. After removal of the bulge
  contribution, we find a nuclear stellar light excess with an extended
  nuclear disc structure, which exhibits a size-luminosity relation. While
  we expect the excess luminosity to be associated with a dynamically
  cooler young stellar population, we do not typically see a matching drop
  in dispersion. This may be because these galaxies have pseudo-bulges
  in which the intrinsic dispersion increases towards the centre. And
  although the young stars may have an impact in the observed kinematics,
  their fraction is too small to dominate over the bulge and compensate
  the increase in dispersion at small radii, so no dispersion drop is
  seen. Finally, we find no evidence for a difference in the stellar
  kinematics and nuclear stellar luminosity excess between these active
  and inactive galaxies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionized and Molecular Gas Kinematics in a z = 1.4 Star-forming
    Galaxy
Authors: Übler, H.; Genzel, R.; Tacconi, L. J.; Förster Schreiber,
   N. M.; Neri, R.; Contursi, A.; Belli, S.; Nelson, E. J.; Lang, P.;
   Shimizu, T. T.; Davies, R.; Herrera-Camus, R.; Lutz, D.; Plewa, P. M.;
   Price, S. H.; Schuster, K.; Sternberg, A.; Tadaki, K.; Wisnioski,
   E.; Wuyts, S.
2018ApJ...854L..24U    Altcode: 2018arXiv180202135U
  We present deep observations of a z = 1.4 massive, star-forming galaxy
  (SFG) in molecular and ionized gas at comparable spatial resolution (CO
  3-2, NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA); Hα, Large Binocular
  Telescope (LBT)). The kinematic tracers agree well, indicating that
  both gas phases are subject to the same gravitational potential
  and physical processes affecting the gas dynamics. We combine the
  one-dimensional velocity and velocity dispersion profiles in CO and Hα
  to forward-model the galaxy in a Bayesian framework, combining a thick
  exponential disk, a bulge, and a dark matter halo. We determine the
  dynamical support due to baryons and dark matter, and find a dark matter
  fraction within one effective radius of {f}<SUB>DM</SUB>}(≤slant
  {R}<SUB>e</SUB>)={0.18}<SUB>-0.04</SUB><SUP>+0.06</SUP>. Our result
  strengthens the evidence for strong baryon-dominance on galactic
  scales of massive z ∼ 1-3 SFGs recently found based on ionized gas
  kinematics alone. <P />Based on observations carried out with the IRAM
  Interferometer NOEMA. IRAM is supported by INSU/CNRS (France), MPG
  (Germany), and IGN (Spain). Based on observations carried out with the
  LBT. The LBT is an international collaboration among institutions in
  the United States, Italy, and Germany. LBT Corporation partners are:
  LBT Beteiligungsgesellschaft, Germany, representing the Max-Planck
  Society, The Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam, and Heidelberg
  University; The University of Arizona on behalf of the Arizona Board
  of Regents; Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Italy; The Ohio State
  University, and The Research Corporation, on behalf of The University
  of Notre Dame, University of Minnesota and University of Virginia.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LLAMA: normal star formation efficiencies of molecular gas
    in the centres of luminous Seyfert galaxies
Authors: Rosario, D. J.; Burtscher, L.; Davies, R. I.; Koss, M.; Ricci,
   C.; Lutz, D.; Riffel, R.; Alexander, D. M.; Genzel, R.; Hicks, E. H.;
   Lin, M. -Y.; Maciejewski, W.; Müller-Sánchez, F.; Orban de Xivry,
   G.; Riffel, R. A.; Schartmann, M.; Schawinski, K.; Schnorr-Müller,
   A.; Saintonge, A.; Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Storchi-Bergmann, T.;
   Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L.; Treister, E.; Veilleux, S.
2018MNRAS.473.5658R    Altcode: 2017arXiv171004224R
  Using new Atacama Pathfinder Experiment and James Clerk Maxwell
  Telescope spectroscopy of the CO 2→1 line, we undertake a controlled
  study of cold molecular gas in moderately luminous (L<SUB>bol</SUB> =
  10<SUP>43-44.5</SUP> erg s<SUP>-1</SUP>) active galactic nuclei (AGN)
  and inactive galaxies from the Luminous Local AGN with Matched Analogs
  (LLAMA) survey. We use spatially resolved infrared photometry of the
  LLAMA galaxies from 2MASS, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
  the Infrared Astronomical Satellite and the Herschel Space Observatory
  (Herschel), corrected for nuclear emission using multicomponent spectral
  energy distribution fits, to examine the dust-reprocessed star formation
  rates, molecular gas fractions and star formation efficiencies (SFEs)
  over their central 1-3 kpc. We find that the gas fractions and central
  SFEs of both active and inactive galaxies are similar when controlling
  for host stellar mass and morphology (Hubble type). The equivalent
  central molecular gas depletion times are consistent with the discs
  of normal spiral galaxies in the local Universe. Despite energetic
  arguments that the AGN in LLAMA should be capable of disrupting the
  observable cold molecular gas in their central environments, our
  results indicate that nuclear radiation only couples weakly with this
  phase. We find a mild preference for obscured AGN to contain higher
  amounts of central molecular gas, which suggests connection between
  AGN obscuration and the gaseous environment of the nucleus. Systems
  with depressed SFEs are not found among the LLAMA AGN. We speculate
  that the processes that sustain the collapse of molecular gas into
  dense pre-stellar cores may also be a prerequisite for the inflow of
  material on to AGN accretion discs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Local Swift-BAT active galactic nuclei prefer circumnuclear
    star formation
Authors: Lutz, D.; Shimizu, T.; Davies, R. I.; Herrera-Camus, R.;
   Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Veilleux, S.
2018A&A...609A...9L    Altcode: 2017arXiv170900857L; 2017A&A...609A...9L
  We use Herschel data to analyze the size of the far-infrared 70 μm
  emission for z &lt; 0.06 local samples of 277 hosts of Swift-BAT
  selected active galactic nuclei (AGN), and 515 comparison galaxies
  that are not detected by BAT. For modest far-infrared luminosities 8.5
  &lt;log (L<SUB>FIR</SUB> [L<SUB>⊙</SUB>]) &lt; 10.5, we find large
  scatter of half light radii R<SUB>e,70</SUB> for both populations,
  but a typical R<SUB>e,70</SUB>≲ 1 kpc for the BAT hosts that is only
  half that of comparison galaxies of same far-infrared luminosity. The
  result mostly reflects a more compact distribution of star formation
  (and hence gas) in the AGN hosts, but compact AGN heated dust may
  contribute in some extremely AGN dominated systems. Our findings are
  in support of an AGN-host coevolution where accretion onto the central
  black hole and star formation are fed from the same gas reservoir,
  with more efficient black hole feeding if that reservoir is more
  concentrated. The significant scatter in the far-infrared sizes
  emphasizes that we are mostly probing spatial scales much larger than
  those of actual accretion, and that rapid accretion variations can
  smear the distinction between the AGN and comparison categories. Large
  samples are hence needed to detect structural differences that
  favor feeding of the black hole. No size difference between AGN
  host and comparison galaxies is observed at higher far-infrared
  luminosities log(L<SUB>FIR</SUB> [L<SUB>⊙</SUB>]) &gt; 10.5 (star
  formation rates ≳6 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP>), possibly
  because these are typically reached in more compact regions. <P
  />Full Table A.1 is only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to
  <A href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr</A>
  (<A href="http://130.79.128.5">http://130.79.128.5</A>) or via <A
  href="http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/609/A9">http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/609/A9</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Brief History of Hinode: Toward the Success in Orbit
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2018ASSL..449....3S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Ten Years of Hinode Solar On-Orbit Observatory
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke; Kubo, Masahito
2018ASSL..449.....S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Pointing stability of Hinode and requirements for the next
    Solar mission Solar-C
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; Masada, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Sakai, S.; Ichimoto,
   K.
2017SPIE10565E..28K    Altcode:
  It is essential to achieve fine pointing stability in a space mission
  aiming for high resolutional observations. In a future Japanese
  solar mission SOLAR-C, which is a successor of the HINODE (SOLAR-B)
  mission, we set targets of angular resolution better than 0.1 arcsec
  in the visible light and better than 0.2 - 0.5 arcsec in EUV and
  X-rays. These resolutions are twice to five times better than those of
  corresponding instruments onboard HINODE. To identify critical items
  to achieve the requirements of the pointing stability in SOLAR-C, we
  assessed in-flight performance of the pointing stability of HINODE that
  achieved the highest pointing stability in Japanese space missions. We
  realized that one of the critical items that have to be improved in
  SOLAR-C is performance of the attitude stability near the upper limit
  of the frequency range of the attitude control system. The stability
  of 0.1 arcsec (3σ) is required in the EUV and X-ray telescopes
  of SOLAR-C while the HINODE performance is slightly worse than the
  requirement. The visible light telescope of HINODE is equipped with
  an image stabilization system inside the telescope, which achieved
  the stability of 0.03 arcsec (3σ) by suppressing the attitude jitter
  in the frequency range lower than 10 Hz. For further improvement, it
  is expected to suppress disturbances induced by resonance between the
  telescope structures and disturbances of momentum wheels and mechanical
  gyros in the frequency range higher than 100 Hz.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Instrument design and on-orbit performance of the solar
    optical telescope aboard hinode (Solar-B)
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2017SPIE10566E..2ZS    Altcode:
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard Solar-B satellite (Hinode)
  is designed to perform high-precision photometric and polarimetric
  observations of the solar lower atmosphere in visible light spectra
  (388-668 nm) with a spatial resolution of 0.2 to 0.3 arcsec. The
  SOT consists of two components; the optical telescope assembly (OTA)
  consisting of a 50-cm aperture Gregorian telescope with a collimating
  lens unit and an active tip-tilt mirror for an image-stabilization and
  an accompanying focal plane package (FPP) housing two filtergraphs and a
  spectro-polarimeter. Since its first-light observation on 25 Oct. 2006,
  the image-stabilization system has been working with performance
  better than 0.01 arcsec rms and the SOT has been continuously
  providing unprecedented solar data of high spatial resolution. Since
  the opto-mechanical and -thermal performance of the OTA is crucial
  to attain unprecedented high-quality solar observations, we here
  describe in detail the instrument design and on-orbit diffraction-limit
  performance of the OTA, the largest state-of-the-art solar telescope
  yet flown in space.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Instrument design of 1.5-m aperture solar optical telescope
    for the Solar-C Mission
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi
2017SPIE10564E..0TS    Altcode:
  A 1.5 m aperture optical telescope is planned for the next Japanese
  solar mission SOLAR-C as one of major three observing instruments. The
  optical telescope is designed to provide high-angular-resolution
  investigation of lower atmosphere from the photosphere to the uppermost
  chromosphere with enhanced spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric
  capability covering a wide wavelength region from 280 nm to 1100
  nm. The opto-mechanical and -thermal performance of the telescope is
  crucial to attain high-quality solar observations and we present a
  study of optical and structural design of the large aperture space
  solar telescope, together with conceptual design of its accompanying
  focal plane instruments: wide-band and narrow-band filtergraphs and
  a spectro-polarimeter for high spatial and temporal observations in
  the solar photospheric and chromospheric lines useful for sounding
  physical condition of dynamical phenomena.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric polarimetry through multiline observations of
    the 850-nm spectral region - II. A magnetic flux tube scenario
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Kato, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Oba, T.; de la
   Cruz Rodríguez, J.; Carlsson, M.; Shimizu, T.; Orozco Suárez, D.;
   Ruiz Cobo, B.; Kubo, M.; Anan, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
2017MNRAS.472..727Q    Altcode: 2017arXiv170801333Q
  In this publication, we continue the work started in Quintero Noda et
  al., examining this time a numerical simulation of a magnetic flux
  tube concentration. Our goal is to study if the physical phenomena
  that take place in it, in particular, the magnetic pumping, leaves
  a specific imprint on the examined spectral lines. We find that the
  profiles from the interior of the flux tube are periodically doppler
  shifted following an oscillation pattern that is also reflected in
  the amplitude of the circular polarization signals. In addition, we
  analyse the properties of the Stokes profiles at the edges of the flux
  tube discovering the presence of linear polarization signals for the Ca
  II lines, although they are weak with an amplitude around 0.5 per cent
  of the continuum intensity. Finally, we compute the response functions
  to perturbations in the longitudinal field, and we estimate the field
  strength using the weak-field approximation. Our results indicate
  that the height of formation of the spectral lines changes during the
  magnetic pumping process, which makes the interpretation of the inferred
  magnetic field strength and its evolution more difficult. These results
  complement those from previous works, demonstrating the capabilities and
  limitations of the 850-nm spectrum for chromospheric Zeeman polarimetry
  in a very dynamic and complex atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical and thermal design of 1.5-m aperture solar UV visible
    and IR observing telescope for Solar-C mission
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Horiuchi, T.; Matsumoto, Y.; Takeyama, N.
2017SPIE10565E..0RS    Altcode:
  The next Japanese solar mission, SOLAR-C, which has been envisaged
  after successful science operation of Hinode (SOLAR-B) mission, is
  perusing two plans: plan-A and plan-B, and under extensive study from
  science objectives as well as engineering point of view. The plan-A
  aims at performing out-of-ecliptic observations for investigating, with
  helioseismic approach, internal structure and dynamo mechanisms of the
  Sun. It also explores polar regions where fast solar wind is believed
  to originate. A baseline orbit for plan-A is a circular orbit of 1 AU
  distance from the Sun with its inclination at around or greater than
  40 degrees. The plan-B aims to study small-scale plasma processes and
  structures in the solar atmosphere which attract researchers' growing
  interest, followed by many Hinode discoveries [1], for understanding
  fully dynamism and magnetic nature of the atmosphere. With plan-B,
  high-angular-resolution investigation of the entire solar atmosphere
  (from the photosphere to the corona, including their interface layers,
  i.e., chromosphere and transition region) is to be performed with
  enhanced spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric capability as compared
  with Hinode, together with enhanced sensitivity towards ultra-violet
  wavelengths. The orbit of plan-B is either a solar synchronous polar
  orbit of altitude around 600 km or a geosynchronous orbit to ensure
  continuous solar observations. After the decision of any one of the
  two plans, the SOLAR-C will be proposed for launch in mid-2010s. In
  this paper, we will present a basic design of one of major planned
  instrumental payload for the plan-B: the Solar Ultra-violet Visible
  and near IR observing Telescope (hereafter referred to as SUVIT). The
  basic concept in designing the SUVIT is to utilize as much as possible
  a heritage of successful telescope of the Solar Optical Telescope
  (SOT) aboard Hinode [2]. Major differences of SUVIT from SOT are
  the three times larger aperture of 1.5 m, which enables to collect
  one order of magnitude more photons than SOT, relatively shorter
  telescope length of 2.8 m to accommodate a launcher's nosecone size
  for possible dual-satellite-launch configuration, and much wider
  observing wavelength from UV (down to 250 nm) through near IR (up
  to 1100 nm). The large aperture is essentially important to attain
  scientific goals of the plan-B, especially for accurate diagnostics of
  the dynamic solar chromosphere as revealed by Hinode, although this
  make it difficult to design the telescope because of ten times more
  solar heat load introduced into the telescope. The SUVIT consists of
  two optically separable components; the telescope assembly (TA) and
  an accompanying focal plane package equipped with filtergraphs and
  spectrographs. Opto-mechanical and -thermal performance of the TA is
  crucial to attain high-quality solar observations and here we present
  a status of feasible study in its optical and thermal designing for
  diffraction-limited performance at visible wavelength in a reasonably
  wide field of view.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Small-scale Structure of Photospheric Convection Retrieved
    by a Deconvolution Technique Applied to Hinode/SP Data
Authors: Oba, T.; Riethmüller, T. L.; Solanki, S. K.; Iida, Y.;
   Quintero Noda, C.; Shimizu, T.
2017ApJ...849....7O    Altcode: 2017arXiv170906933O
  Solar granules are bright patterns surrounded by dark channels, called
  intergranular lanes, in the solar photosphere and are a manifestation of
  overshooting convection. Observational studies generally find stronger
  upflows in granules and weaker downflows in intergranular lanes. This
  trend is, however, inconsistent with the results of numerical
  simulations in which downflows are stronger than upflows through the
  joint action of gravitational acceleration/deceleration and pressure
  gradients. One cause of this discrepancy is the image degradation caused
  by optical distortion and light diffraction and scattering that takes
  place in an imaging instrument. We apply a deconvolution technique to
  Hinode/SP data in an attempt to recover the original solar scene. Our
  results show a significant enhancement in both the convective upflows
  and downflows but particularly for the latter. After deconvolution,
  the up- and downflows reach maximum amplitudes of -3.0 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  and +3.0 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> at an average geometrical height of roughly
  50 km, respectively. We found that the velocity distributions after
  deconvolution match those derived from numerical simulations. After
  deconvolution, the net LOS velocity averaged over the whole field of
  view lies close to zero as expected in a rough sense from mass balance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: Local Swift-BAT AGN observed with
    Herschel (Lutz+, 2018)
Authors: Lutz, D.; Shimizu, T.; Davies, R. I.; Herrera Camus, R.;
   Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Veilleux, S.
2017yCat..36090009L    Altcode:
  Table A.1 lists the basic properties of the BAT AGN and reference
  samples, and the derived far-infrared sizes. For guidance, part of
  the table and related notes are also included in an appendix to the
  paper. <P />(1 data file).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar polarimetry through the K I lines at 770 nm
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Uitenbroek, H.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu,
   T.; Oba, T.; Carlsson, M.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Kubo,
   M.; Anan, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
2017MNRAS.470.1453Q    Altcode: 2017arXiv170510002Q
  We characterize the K I D<SUB>1</SUB> &amp; D<SUB>2</SUB> lines in
  order to determine whether they could complement the 850 nm window,
  containing the Ca II infrared triplet lines and several Zeeman sensitive
  photospheric lines, that was studied previously. We investigate the
  effect of partial redistribution on the intensity profiles, their
  sensitivity to changes in different atmospheric parameters, and
  the spatial distribution of Zeeman polarization signals employing a
  realistic magnetohydrodynamic simulation. The results show that these
  lines form in the upper photosphere at around 500 km, and that they
  are sensitive to the line-of-sight velocity and magnetic field strength
  at heights where neither the photospheric lines nor the Ca II infrared
  lines are. However, at the same time, we found that their sensitivity
  to the temperature essentially comes from the photosphere. Then, we
  conclude that the K I lines provide a complement to the lines in the
  850 nm window for the determination of atmospheric parameters in the
  upper photosphere, especially for the line-of-sight velocity and the
  magnetic field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Non-potential Field Formation in the X-shaped Quadrupole
    Magnetic Field Configuration
Authors: Kawabata, Y.; Inoue, S.; Shimizu, T.
2017ApJ...842..106K    Altcode: 2017arXiv170502560K
  Some types of solar flares are observed in X-shaped quadrupolar field
  configuration. To understand the magnetic energy storage in such
  a region, we studied non-potential field formation in an X-shaped
  quadrupolar field region formed in the active region NOAA 11967, which
  produced three X-shaped M-class flares on 2014 February 2. Nonlinear
  force-free field modeling was applied to a time series of vector
  magnetic field maps from the Solar Optical Telescope on board Hinode
  and the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager on board the Solar Dynamics
  Observatory. Our analysis of the temporal three-dimensional magnetic
  field evolution shows that the sufficient free energy had already
  been stored more than 10 hr before the occurrence of the first M-class
  flare and that the storage was observed in a localized region. In this
  localized region, quasi-separatrix layers (QSLs) started to develop
  gradually from 9 hr before the first M-class flare. One of the flare
  ribbons that appeared in the first M-class flare was co-spatial with
  the location of the QSLs, suggesting that the formation of the QSLs is
  important in the process of energy release. These QSLs do not appear
  in the potential field calculation, indicating that they were created
  by the non-potential field. The formation of the QSLs was associated
  with the transverse photospheric motion of the pre-emerged flux and the
  emergence of a new flux. This observation indicates that the occurrence
  of the flares requires the formation of QSLs in the non-potential
  field in which free magnetic energy is stored in advance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Indication of the Hanle Effect by Comparing the Scattering
    Polarization Observed by CLASP in the Lyα and Si III 120.65 nm Lines
Authors: Ishikawa, R.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Uitenbroek, H.; Kubo, M.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Goto, M.; Kano, R.; Narukage, N.; Bando, T.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Ishikawa, S.; Giono, G.; Suematsu, Y.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.;
   Sakao, T.; Winebarger, A.; Kobayashi, K.; Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.;
   Auchère, F.; Štěpán, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Asensio Ramos, A.; Manso
   Sainz, R.; De Pontieu, B.; Ichimoto, K.; Carlsson, M.; Casini, R.
2017ApJ...841...31I    Altcode:
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter is a sounding
  rocket experiment that has provided the first successful measurement
  of the linear polarization produced by scattering processes in
  the hydrogen Lyα line (121.57 nm) radiation of the solar disk. In
  this paper, we report that the Si III line at 120.65 nm also shows
  scattering polarization and we compare the scattering polarization
  signals observed in the Lyα and Si III lines in order to search for
  observational signatures of the Hanle effect. We focus on four selected
  bright structures and investigate how the U/I spatial variations vary
  between the Lyα wing, the Lyα core, and the Si III line as a function
  of the total unsigned photospheric magnetic flux estimated from Solar
  Dynamics Observatory/Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager observations. In
  an internetwork region, the Lyα core shows an antisymmetric spatial
  variation across the selected bright structure, but it does not show
  it in other more magnetized regions. In the Si III line, the spatial
  variation of U/I deviates from the above-mentioned antisymmetric
  shape as the total unsigned photospheric magnetic flux increases. A
  plausible explanation of this difference is the operation of the Hanle
  effect. We argue that diagnostic techniques based on the scattering
  polarization observed simultaneously in two spectral lines with very
  different sensitivities to the Hanle effect, like Lyα and Si III,
  are of great potential interest for exploring the magnetism of the
  upper solar chromosphere and transition region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The role of host galaxy for the environmental dependence of
    active nuclei in local galaxies
Authors: Davies, Richard I.; Hicks, E. K. S.; Erwin, P.; Burtscher,
   L.; Contursi, A.; Genzel, R.; Janssen, A.; Koss, M.; Lin, M. -Y.;
   Lutz, D.; Maciejewski, W.; Müller-Sánchez, F.; Orban de Xivry,
   G.; Ricci, C.; Riffel, R.; Riffel, R. A.; Rosario, D.; Schartmann,
   M.; Schnorr-Müller, A.; Shimizu, T.; Sternberg, A.; Sturm, E.;
   Storchi-Bergmann, T.; Tacconi, L.; Veilleux, S.
2017MNRAS.466.4917D    Altcode: 2017MNRAS.tmp...69D; 2016arXiv161009890D
  We discuss the environment of local hard X-ray selected active galaxies,
  with reference to two independent group catalogues. We find that
  the fraction of these AGN in S0 host galaxies decreases strongly
  as a function of galaxy group size (halo mass) - which contrasts
  with the increasing fraction of galaxies of S0 type in denser
  environments. However, there is no evidence for an environmental
  dependence of AGN in spiral galaxies. Because most AGN are found in
  spiral galaxies, this dilutes the signature of environmental dependence
  for the population as a whole. We argue that the differing results
  for AGN in disc-dominated and bulge-dominated galaxies are related
  to the source of the gas fuelling the AGN, and so may also impact the
  luminosity function, duty cycle and obscuration. We find that there is
  a significant difference in the luminosity function for AGN in spiral
  and S0 galaxies, and tentative evidence for some difference in the
  fraction of obscured AGN.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Polarization Calibration of the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha
    SpectroPolarimeter for a 0.1% Polarization Sensitivity in the VUV
Range. Part II: In-Flight Calibration
Authors: Giono, G.; Ishikawa, R.; Narukage, N.; Kano, R.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Kubo, M.; Ishikawa, S.; Bando, T.; Hara, H.; Suematsu, Y.;
   Winebarger, A.; Kobayashi, K.; Auchère, F.; Trujillo Bueno, J.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.; Asensio
   Ramos, A.; Štěpán, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Manso Sainz, R.; De Pontieu,
   B.; Ichimoto, K.; Carlsson, M.; Casini, R.; Goto, M.
2017SoPh..292...57G    Altcode:
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha SpectroPolarimeter is a sounding
  rocket instrument designed to measure for the first time the linear
  polarization of the hydrogen Lyman-α line (121.6 nm). The instrument
  was successfully launched on 3 September 2015 and observations were
  conducted at the solar disc center and close to the limb during the
  five-minutes flight. In this article, the disc center observations are
  used to provide an in-flight calibration of the instrument spurious
  polarization. The derived in-flight spurious polarization is consistent
  with the spurious polarization levels determined during the pre-flight
  calibration and a statistical analysis of the polarization fluctuations
  from solar origin is conducted to ensure a 0.014% precision on the
  spurious polarization. The combination of the pre-flight and the
  in-flight polarization calibrations provides a complete picture of
  the instrument response matrix, and a proper error transfer method
  is used to confirm the achieved polarization accuracy. As a result,
  the unprecedented 0.1% polarization accuracy of the instrument in the
  vacuum ultraviolet is ensured by the polarization calibration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Herschel far-infrared photometry of the Swift Burst Alert
    Telescope active galactic nuclei sample of the local universe -
    III. Global star-forming properties and the lack of a connection to
    nuclear activity
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Mushotzky, Richard F.; Meléndez, Marcio;
   Koss, Michael J.; Barger, Amy J.; Cowie, Lennox L.
2017MNRAS.466.3161S    Altcode: 2016arXiv161203941S
  We combine the Herschel Space Observatory PACS (Photoconductor Array
  Camera and Spectrometer) and SPIRE (Spectral and Photometric Imaging
  Receiver) photometry with archival WISE (Wide-field Infrared Survey
  Explorer) photometry to construct the spectral energy distributions
  (SEDs) for over 300 local (z &lt; 0.05), ultrahard X-ray (14-195
  keV) selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the Swift Burst
  Alert Telescope (BAT) 58-month catalogue. Using a simple analytical
  model that combines an exponentially cutoff power law with a single
  temperature modified blackbody, we decompose the SEDs into a host
  galaxy and AGN component. We calculate dust masses, dust temperatures,
  and star formation rates (SFRs) for our entire sample and compare them
  to a stellar mass-matched sample of local non-AGN galaxies. We find AGN
  host galaxies have systematically higher dust masses, dust temperatures,
  and SFRs due to the higher prevalence of late-type galaxies to host
  an AGN, in agreement with previous studies of the Swift/BAT AGN. We
  provide a scaling to convert X-ray luminosities into 8-1000 μm AGN
  luminosities, as well as determine the best mid-to-far IR colours for
  identifying AGN-dominated galaxies in the IR regime. We find that
  for nearly 30 per cent of our sample, the 70 μm emission contains
  a significant contribution from the AGN (&gt;0.5), especially at
  higher luminosities (L<SUB>14 - 195 keV</SUB> &gt; 10<SUP>42.5</SUP>
  erg s<SUP>-1</SUP>). Finally, we measure the local SFR-AGN luminosity
  relationship, finding a slope of 0.18, large scatter (0.37 dex), and
  no evidence for an upturn at high AGN luminosity. We conclude with a
  discussion on the implications of our results within the context of
  galaxy evolution with and without AGN feedback.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery of Scattering Polarization in the Hydrogen Lyα
    Line of the Solar Disk Radiation
Authors: Kano, R.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Winebarger, A.; Auchère, F.;
   Narukage, N.; Ishikawa, R.; Kobayashi, K.; Bando, T.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Kubo, M.; Ishikawa, S.; Giono, G.; Hara, H.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu,
   T.; Sakao, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Goto, M.; Belluzzi, L.;
   Štěpán, J.; Asensio Ramos, A.; Manso Sainz, R.; Champey, P.;
   Cirtain, J.; De Pontieu, B.; Casini, R.; Carlsson, M.
2017ApJ...839L..10K    Altcode: 2017arXiv170403228K
  There is a thin transition region (TR) in the solar atmosphere where
  the temperature rises from 10,000 K in the chromosphere to millions
  of degrees in the corona. Little is known about the mechanisms that
  dominate this enigmatic region other than the magnetic field plays a
  key role. The magnetism of the TR can only be detected by polarimetric
  measurements of a few ultraviolet (UV) spectral lines, the Lyα line
  of neutral hydrogen at 121.6 nm (the strongest line of the solar UV
  spectrum) being of particular interest given its sensitivity to the
  Hanle effect (the magnetic-field-induced modification of the scattering
  line polarization). We report the discovery of linear polarization
  produced by scattering processes in the Lyα line, obtained with
  the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) rocket
  experiment. The Stokes profiles observed by CLASP in quiet regions of
  the solar disk show that the Q/I and U/I linear polarization signals are
  of the order of 0.1% in the line core and up to a few percent in the
  nearby wings, and that both have conspicuous spatial variations with
  scales of ∼10 arcsec. These observations help constrain theoretical
  models of the chromosphere-corona TR and extrapolations of the
  magnetic field from photospheric magnetograms. In fact, the observed
  spatial variation from disk to limb of polarization at the line core
  and wings already challenge the predictions from three-dimensional
  magnetohydrodynamical models of the upper solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric polarimetry through multiline observations of
    the 850-nm spectral region
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Shimizu, T.; Katsukawa, Y.; de la Cruz
   Rodríguez, J.; Carlsson, M.; Anan, T.; Oba, T.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Suematsu, Y.
2017MNRAS.464.4534Q    Altcode: 2016arXiv161006651Q
  Future solar missions and ground-based telescopes aim to understand the
  magnetism of the solar chromosphere. We performed a supporting study in
  Quintero Noda et al. focused on the infrared Ca II 8542 Å line and we
  concluded that it is one of the best candidates because it is sensitive
  to a large range of atmospheric heights, from the photosphere to the
  middle chromosphere. However, we believe that it is worth trying to
  improve the results produced by this line observing additional spectral
  lines. In that regard, we examined the neighbourhood solar spectrum
  looking for spectral lines which could increase the sensitivity to
  the atmospheric parameters. Interestingly, we discovered several
  photospheric lines which greatly improve the photospheric sensitivity
  to the magnetic field vector. Moreover, they are located close to a
  second chromospheric line which also belongs to the Ca II infrared
  triplet, I.e. the Ca II 8498 Å line, and enhances the sensitivity to
  the atmospheric parameters at chromospheric layers. We conclude that the
  lines in the vicinity of the Ca II 8542 Å line not only increase its
  sensitivity to the atmospheric parameters at all layers, but also they
  constitute an excellent spectral window for chromospheric polarimetry.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Height-dependent Velocity Structure of Photospheric Convection
    in Granules and Intergranular Lanes with Hinode/SOT
Authors: Oba, T.; Iida, Y.; Shimizu, T.
2017ApJ...836...40O    Altcode: 2016arXiv161206175O
  The solar photosphere is the visible surface of the Sun, where many
  bright granules, surrounded by narrow dark intergranular lanes,
  are observed everywhere. The granular pattern is a manifestation of
  convective motion at the photospheric level, but its velocity structure
  in the height direction is poorly understood observationally. Applying
  bisector analysis to a photospheric spectral line recorded by the
  Hinode Solar Optical Telescope, we derived the velocity structure
  of the convective motion in granular regions and intergranular
  lanes separately. The amplitude of motion of the convective material
  decreases from 0.65 to 0.40 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> as the material rises in
  granules, whereas the amplitude of motion increases from 0.30 to 0.50
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP> as it descends in intergranular lanes. These values
  are significantly larger than those obtained in previous studies
  using bisector analysis. The acceleration of descending materials
  with depth is not predicted from the convectively stable condition in
  a stratified atmosphere. Such convective instability can be developed
  more efficiently by radiative cooling and/or a gas pressure gradient,
  which can control the dynamical behavior of convective material
  in intergranular lanes. Our analysis demonstrated that bisector
  analysis is a useful method for investigating the long-term dynamic
  behavior of convective material when a large number of pixels
  is available. In addition, one example is the temporal evolution
  of granular fragmentation, in which downflowing material develops
  gradually from a higher layer downward.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: UV/EUV High-Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope: A Next
    Generation Solar Physics Mission white paper
Authors: Imada, S.; Shimizu, T.; Kawate, T.; Hara, H.; Watanabe, T.
2017arXiv170104972I    Altcode:
  The origin of the activity in the solar corona is a long-standing
  problem in solar physics. Recent satellite observations, such as Hinode,
  Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph
  (IRIS), show the detail characteristics of the solar atmosphere and
  try to reveal the energy transfer from the photosphere to the corona
  through the magnetic fields and its energy conversion by various
  processes. However, quantitative estimation of energy transfer along
  the magnetic field is not enough. There are mainly two reason why it is
  difficult to observe the energy transfer from photosphere to corona; 1)
  spatial resolution gap between photosphere (a few 0.1 arcsec) and corona
  (a few arcsec), 2) lack in temperature coverage. Furthermore, there
  is not enough observational knowledge of the physical parameters in
  the energy dissipation region. There are mainly three reason why it is
  difficult to observe in the vicinity of the energy dissipation region;
  1) small spatial scale, 2) short time scale, 3) low emission. It is
  generally believed that the energy dissipation occurs in the very small
  scale and its duration is very short (10 second). Further, the density
  in the dissipation region might be very low. Therefore, the high spatial
  and temporal resolution UV/EUV spectroscopic observation with wide
  temperature coverage is crucial to estimate the energy transport from
  photosphere to corona quantitatively and diagnose the plasma dynamics
  in the vicinity of the energy dissipation region. Main Science Target
  for the telescope is quantitative estimation for the energy transfer
  from the photosphere to the corona, and clarification of the plasma
  dynamics in the vicinity of the energy dissipation region, where is the
  key region for coronal heating, solar wind acceleration, and/or solar
  flare, by the high spatial and temporal resolution UV/EUV spectroscopy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery of Ubiquitous Fast-Propagating Intensity Disturbances
    by the Chromospheric Lyman Alpha Spectropolarimeter (CLASP)
Authors: Kubo, M.; Katsukawa, Y.; Suematsu, Y.; Kano, R.; Bando,
   T.; Narukage, N.; Ishikawa, R.; Hara, H.; Giono, G.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Ishikawa, S.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Winebarger, A.; Kobayashi, K.;
   Cirtain, J.; Champey, P.; Auchère, F.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Asensio
   Ramos, A.; Štěpán, J.; Belluzzi, L.; Manso Sainz, R.; De Pontieu,
   B.; Ichimoto, K.; Carlsson, M.; Casini, R.; Goto, M.
2016ApJ...832..141K    Altcode:
  High-cadence observations by the slit-jaw (SJ) optics system of the
  sounding rocket experiment known as the Chromospheric Lyman Alpha
  Spectropolarimeter (CLASP) reveal ubiquitous intensity disturbances
  that recurrently propagate in either the chromosphere or the transition
  region or both at a speed much higher than the speed of sound. The
  CLASP/SJ instrument provides a time series of two-dimensional images
  taken with broadband filters centered on the Lyα line at a 0.6 s
  cadence. The multiple fast-propagating intensity disturbances appear in
  the quiet Sun and in an active region, and they are clearly detected in
  at least 20 areas in a field of view of 527″ × 527″ during the 5
  minute observing time. The apparent speeds of the intensity disturbances
  range from 150 to 350 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, and they are comparable
  to the local Alfvén speed in the transition region. The intensity
  disturbances tend to propagate along bright elongated structures away
  from areas with strong photospheric magnetic fields. This suggests
  that the observed fast-propagating intensity disturbances are related
  to the magnetic canopy structures. The maximum distance traveled by
  the intensity disturbances is about 10″, and the widths are a few
  arcseconds, which are almost determined by a pixel size of 1.″03. The
  timescale of each intensity pulse is shorter than 30 s. One possible
  explanation for the fast-propagating intensity disturbances observed
  by CLASP is magnetohydrodynamic fast-mode waves.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode and IRIS Observations of the Magnetohydrodynamic Waves
    Propagating from the Photosphere to the Chromosphere in a Sunspot
Authors: Kanoh, Ryuichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke
2016ApJ...831...24K    Altcode: 2016arXiv160803910K
  Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves have been considered as energy
  sources for heating the solar chromosphere and the corona. Although
  MHD waves have been observed in the solar atmosphere, there are a
  lack of quantitative estimates on the energy transfer and dissipation
  in the atmosphere. We performed simultaneous Hinode and Interface
  Region Imaging Spectrograph observations of a sunspot umbra to
  derive the upward energy fluxes at two different atmospheric layers
  (photosphere and lower transition region) and estimate the energy
  dissipation. The observations revealed some properties of the observed
  periodic oscillations in physical quantities, such as their phase
  relations, temporal behaviors, and power spectra, making a conclusion
  that standing slow-mode waves are dominant at the photosphere with
  their high-frequency leakage, which is observed as upward waves at
  the chromosphere and the lower transition region. Our estimates of
  upward energy fluxes are 2.0× {10}<SUP>7</SUP> erg cm<SUP>-2</SUP>
  s<SUP>-1</SUP> at the photospheric level and 8.3× {10}<SUP>4</SUP>
  erg cm<SUP>-2</SUP> s<SUP>-1</SUP> at the lower transition region
  level. The difference between the energy fluxes is larger than the
  energy required to maintain the chromosphere in the sunspot umbrae,
  suggesting that the observed waves can make a crucial contribution to
  the heating of the chromosphere in the sunspot umbrae. In contrast,
  the upward energy flux derived at the lower transition region level is
  smaller than the energy flux required for heating the corona, implying
  that we may need another heating mechanism. We should, however, note
  a possibility that the energy dissipated at the chromosphere might be
  overestimated because of the opacity effect.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: PACS observations of Herschel-BAT
    sample (Melendez+, 2014)
Authors: Melendez, M.; Mushotzky, R. F.; Shimizu, T. T.; Barger,
   A. J.; Cowie, L. L.
2016yCat..17940152M    Altcode:
  The sample presented in this work was selected from the low-redshift
  (z&lt;0.05) 58 month Swift/BAT survey with a median redshift of z~0.025
  (http://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/results/bs58mon/). The 58 month Swift/BAT
  is an almost uniform hard X-ray all-sky survey and reaches a flux
  level of 1.1x10<SUP>-11</SUP> erg/s/cm<SUP>2</SUP> over 50% of the
  sky and 1.48x10<SUP>-11</SUP>erg/s/cm<SUP>2</SUP> over 90% of the sky
  (Baumgartner et al. 2013, Cat. J/ApJS/207/19). Source identifications
  are based primarily on the X-ray imaging data and a correlation with
  optical images and catalogs. In some cases, the identifications are
  based on positional coincidences with previously known AGNs. The
  main advantage of the BAT AGN sample is that the selection process is
  completely independent of optical, IR, or radio properties of the host
  galaxy. Our final sample of galaxies includes 149 Seyfert 1 galaxies
  (1/1.2/1.5), 157 Seyfert 2 galaxies (1.8/1.9/2.0), 6 LINERs, and 1
  unclassified Seyfert galaxy, ESO 464-G016. <P />(1 data file).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: SPIRE observations of Herschel-BAT
    sample (Shimizu+, 2016)
Authors: Shimizu, T. T.; Melendez, M.; Mushotzky, R. F.; Koss, M. J.;
   Barger, A. J.; Cowie, L. L.
2016yCat..74563335S    Altcode:
  We selected our sample of 313 AGN from the 58 month Swift/BAT Catalogue
  (https://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/results/bs58mon) (Baumgartner et al., 2012,
  in prep.), imposing a redshift cutoff of z&lt;0.05. All different types
  of AGN were chosen only excluding Blazars/BL Lac objects which most
  likely introduce complicated beaming effects. To determine their AGN
  type, for 252 sources we used the classifications from the BAT AGN
  Spectroscopic Survey (Koss et al., in preparation) which compiled
  and analysed optical spectra for the Swift/BAT 70 month catalogue
  (Berney et al., 2015MNRAS.454.3622B). <P />(2 data files).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis of a spatially deconvolved solar pore
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Shimizu, T.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.
2016MNRAS.460.1476Q    Altcode: 2016arXiv160501796Q; 2016MNRAS.tmp..847Q
  Solar pores are active regions with large magnetic field strengths
  and apparent simple magnetic configurations. Their properties
  resemble the ones found for the sunspot umbra although pores do
  not show penumbra. Therefore, solar pores present themselves as an
  intriguing phenomenon that is not completely understood. We examine
  in this work a solar pore observed with Hinode/SP using two state
  of the art techniques. The first one is the spatial deconvolution
  of the spectropolarimetric data that allows removing the stray
  light contamination induced by the spatial point spread function
  of the telescope. The second one is the inversion of the Stokes
  profiles assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium that let us to
  infer the atmospheric physical parameters. After applying these
  techniques, we found that the spatial deconvolution method does not
  introduce artefacts, even at the edges of the magnetic structure,
  where large horizontal gradients are detected on the atmospheric
  parameters. Moreover, we also describe the physical properties of
  the magnetic structure at different heights finding that, in the
  inner part of the solar pore, the temperature is lower than outside,
  the magnetic field strength is larger than 2 kG and unipolar, and
  the line-of-sight velocity is almost null. At neighbouring pixels,
  we found low magnetic field strengths of same polarity and strong
  downward motions that only occur at the low photosphere, below the
  continuum optical depth log τ = -1. Finally, we studied the spatial
  relation between different atmospheric parameters at different heights
  corroborating the physical properties described before.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LiteBIRD: lite satellite for the study of B-mode polarization
    and inflation from cosmic microwave background radiation detection
Authors: Ishino, H.; Akiba, Y.; Arnold, K.; Barron, D.; Borrill,
   J.; Chendra, R.; Chinone, Y.; Cho, S.; Cukierman, A.; de Haan, T.;
   Dobbs, M.; Dominjon, A.; Dotani, T.; Elleflot, T.; Errard, J.; Fujino,
   T.; Fuke, H.; Funaki, T.; Goeckner-Wald, N.; Halverson, N.; Harvey,
   P.; Hasebe, T.; Hasegawa, M.; Hattori, K.; Hattori, M.; Hazumi, M.;
   Hidehira, N.; Hill, C.; Hilton, G.; Holzapfel, W.; Hori, Y.; Hubmayr,
   J.; Ichiki, K.; Imada, H.; Inatani, J.; Inoue, M.; Inoue, Y.; Irie,
   F.; Irwin, K.; Ishitsuka, H.; Jeong, O.; Kanai, H.; Karatsu, K.;
   Kashima, S.; Katayama, N.; Kawano, I.; Kawasaki, T.; Keating, B.;
   Kernasovskiy, S.; Keskitalo, R.; Kibayashi, A.; Kida, Y.; Kimura,
   N.; Kimura, K.; Kisner, T.; Kohri, K.; Komatsu, E.; Komatsu, K.; Kuo,
   C. -L.; Kuromiya, S.; Kusaka, A.; Lee, A.; Li, D.; Linder, E.; Maki,
   M.; Matsuhara, H.; Matsumura, T.; Matsuoka, S.; Matsuura, S.; Mima,
   S.; Minami, Y.; Mitsuda, K.; Nagai, M.; Nagasaki, T.; Nagata, R.;
   Nakajima, M.; Nakamura, S.; Namikawa, T.; Naruse, M.; Nishibori, T.;
   Nishijo, K.; Nishino, H.; Noda, A.; Noguchi, T.; Ogawa, H.; Ogburn,
   W.; Oguri, S.; Ohta, I.; Okada, N.; Okamoto, A.; Okamura, T.; Otani,
   C.; Pisano, G.; Rebeiz, G.; Richards, P.; Sakai, S.; Sakurai, Y.;
   Sato, Y.; Sato, N.; Segawa, Y.; Sekiguchi, S.; Sekimoto, Y.; Sekine,
   M.; Seljak, U.; Sherwin, B.; Shimizu, T.; Shinozaki, K.; Shu, S.;
   Stompor, R.; Sugai, H.; Sugita, H.; Suzuki, J.; Suzuki, T.; Suzuki,
   A.; Tajima, O.; Takada, S.; Takakura, S.; Takano, K.; Takatori, S.;
   Takei, Y.; Tanabe, D.; Tomaru, T.; Tomita, N.; Turin, P.; Uozumi,
   S.; Utsunomiya, S.; Uzawa, Y.; Wada, T.; Watanabe, H.; Westbrook,
   B.; Whitehorn, N.; Yamada, Y.; Yamamoto, R.; Yamasaki, N.; Yamashita,
   T.; Yoshida, T.; Yoshida, M.; Yotsumoto, K.
2016SPIE.9904E..0XI    Altcode:
  LiteBIRD is a next generation satellite aiming for the detection
  of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) B-mode polarization
  imprinted by the primordial gravitational waves generated in the
  era of the inflationary universe. The science goal of LiteBIRD is
  to measure the tensor-to-scaler ratio r with a precision of δr
  &lt; 10<SUP>-3</SUP>♢, offering us a crucial test of the major
  large-single-field slow-roll inflation models. LiteBIRD is planned
  to conduct an all sky survey at the sun-earth second Lagrange point
  (L2) with an angular resolution of about 0.5 degrees to cover the
  multipole moment range of 2 &lt;= l &lt;= 200. We use focal plane
  detector arrays consisting of 2276 superconducting detectors to measure
  the frequency range from 40 to 400 GHz with the sensitivity of 3.2
  μK·arcmin. including the ongoing studies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of a near-infrared detector and a fiber-optic
    integral field unit for a space solar observatory SOLAR-C
Authors: Katsukawa, Yukio; Kamata, Yukiko; Anan, Tetsu; Hara,
   Hirohisa; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Bando, Takamasa; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi
2016SPIE.9904E..5IK    Altcode:
  We are developing a high sensitivity and fast readout near-infrared
  (NIR) detector and an integral field unit (IFU) for making
  spectro-polarimetric observations of rapidly varying chromospheric
  spectrum lines, such as He I 1083 nm and Ca II 854 nm, in the
  next space-based solar mission SOLAR-C. We made tests of a 1.7 μm
  cutoff H2RG detector with the SIDECAR ASIC for the application in
  SOLAR-C. It's important to verify its perfor- mance in the temperature
  condition around -100 °C, which is hotter than the typical temperature
  environment used for a NIR detector. We built a system for testing the
  detector between -70 °C and -140 °C. We verified linearity, read-out
  noise, and dark current in both the slow and fast readout modes. We
  found the detector has to be cooled down lower than -100 °C because
  of significant increase of the number of hot pixels in the hotter
  environment. The compact and polarization maintenance IFU was designed
  using fiber-optic ribbons consisting of rectangular cores which exhibit
  good polarization maintenance. A Silicone adhesive DC-SE9187L was used
  to hold the fragile fiber-optic ribbons in a metal housing. Polarization
  maintenance property was confirmed though polarization calibration
  as well as temperature control are required to suppress polarization
  crosstalk and to achieve the polarization accuracy in SOLAR-C.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: In-flight performance of the polarization modulator in the
    CLASP rocket experiment
Authors: Ishikawa, Shin-nosuke; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Kano, Ryohei;
   Bando, Takamasa; Ishikawa, Ryoko; Giono, Gabriel; Beabout, Dyana L.;
   Beabout, Brent L.; Nakayama, Satoshi; Tajima, Takao
2016SPIE.9905E..2UI    Altcode:
  We developed a polarization modulation unit (PMU), a motor system
  to rotate a waveplate continuously. In polarization measurements,
  the continuous rotating waveplate is an important element as well as
  a polarization analyzer to record the incident polarization in a time
  series of camera exposures. The control logic of PMU was originally
  developed for the next Japanese solar observation satellite SOLAR-C by
  the SOLAR-C working group. We applied this PMU for the Chromospheric
  Lyman-alpha SpectroPolarimeter (CLASP). CLASP is a sounding rocket
  experiment to observe the linear polarization of the Lyman-alpha
  emission (121.6 nm vacuum ultraviolet) from the upper chromosphere and
  transition region of the Sun with a high polarization sensitivity of
  0.1 % for the first time and investigate their vector magnetic field
  by the Hanle effect. The driver circuit was developed to optimize the
  rotation for the CLASP waveplate (12.5 rotations per minute). Rotation
  non- uniformity of the waveplate causes error in the polarization
  degree (i.e. scale error) and crosstalk between Stokes components. We
  confirmed that PMU has superior rotation uniformity in the ground
  test and the scale error and crosstalk of Stokes Q and U are less than
  0.01 %. After PMU was attached to the CLASP instrument, we performed
  vibration tests and confirmed all PMU functions performance including
  rotation uniformity did not change. CLASP was successfully launched on
  September 3, 2015, and PMU functioned well as designed. PMU achieved
  a good rotation uniformity, and the high precision polarization
  measurement of CLASP was successfully achieved.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis of spatially deconvolved polar faculae
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Suematsu, Y.; Ruiz Cobo, B.; Shimizu,
   T.; Asensio Ramos, A.
2016MNRAS.460..956Q    Altcode: 2016MNRAS.tmp..838Q; 2016arXiv160500330Q
  Polar faculae are bright features that can be detected in
  solar limb observations and they are related to magnetic field
  concentrations. Although there are a large number of works studying
  them, some questions about their nature as their magnetic properties
  at different heights are still open. Thus, we aim to improve the
  understanding of solar polar faculae. In that sense, we infer
  the vertical stratification of the temperature, gas pressure,
  line-of-sight velocity and magnetic field vector of polar faculae
  regions. We performed inversions of the Stokes profiles observed
  with Hinode/Spectropolarimeter after removing the stray light
  contamination produced by the spatial point spread function of the
  telescope. Moreover, after solving the azimuth ambiguity, we transform
  the magnetic field vector to local solar coordinates. The obtained
  results reveal that the polar faculae are constituted by hot plasma with
  low line-of-sight velocities and single polarity magnetic fields in the
  kilogauss range that are nearly perpendicular to the solar surface. We
  also found that the spatial location of these magnetic fields is
  slightly shifted respect to the continuum observations towards the
  disc centre. We believe that this is due to the hot wall effect that
  allows detecting photons that come from deeper layers located closer
  to the solar limb.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectropolarimetric capabilities of Ca II 8542 Å line
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Shimizu, T.; de la Cruz Rodríguez, J.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Anan, T.; Suematsu, Y.
2016MNRAS.459.3363Q    Altcode: 2016MNRAS.tmp..667Q; 2016arXiv160404957Q
  The next generation of space- and ground-based solar missions aim
  to study the magnetic properties of the solar chromosphere using the
  infrared Ca II lines and the He I 10830 Å line. The former seem to be
  the best candidates to study the stratification of magnetic fields in
  the solar chromosphere and their relation to the other thermodynamical
  properties underlying the chromospheric plasma. The purpose of this
  work is to provide a detailed analysis of the diagnostic capabilities
  of the Ca II 8542 Å line, anticipating forthcoming observational
  facilities. We study the sensitivity of the Ca II 8542 Å line
  to perturbations applied to the physical parameters of reference
  semi-empirical 1D model atmospheres using response functions and we
  make use of 3D magnetohydrodynamics simulations to examine the expected
  polarization signals for moderate magnetic field strengths. Our results
  indicate that the Ca II 8542 Å line is mostly sensitive to the layers
  enclosed in the range log τ = [0, -5.5], under the physical conditions
  that are present in our model atmospheres. In addition, the simulated
  magnetic flux tube generates strong longitudinal signals in its centre
  and moderate transversal signals, due to the vertical expansion of
  magnetic field lines, in its edge. Thus, observing the Ca II 8542 Å
  line we will be able to infer the 3D geometry of moderate magnetic
  field regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectro-polarimetric observation in UV with CLASP to probe
    the chromosphere and transition region
Authors: Kano, Ryouhei; Ishikawa, Ryohko; Winebarger, Amy R.; Auchère,
   Frédéric; Trujillo Bueno, Javier; Narukage, Noriyuki; Kobayashi,
   Ken; Bando, Takamasa; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Ishikawa,
   Shin-Nosuke; Giono, Gabriel; Hara, Hirohisa; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Sakao, Taro; Tsuneta, Saku; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Goto, Motoshi; Cirtain, Jonathan W.; De Pontieu, Bart; Casini, Roberto;
   Manso Sainz, Rafael; Asensio Ramos, Andres; Stepan, Jiri; Belluzzi,
   Luca; Carlsson, Mats
2016SPD....4710107K    Altcode:
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) is a NASA
  sounding-rocket experiment that was performed in White Sands in
  the US on September 3, 2015. During its 5-minute ballistic flight,
  CLASP successfully made the first spectro-polarimetric observation in
  the Lyman-alpha line (121.57 nm) originating in the chromosphere and
  transition region. Since the Lyman-alpha polarization is sensitive
  to magnetic field of 10-100 G by the Hanle effect, we aim to infer
  the magnetic field information in such upper solar atmosphere with
  this experiment.The obtained CLASP data showed that the Lyman-alpha
  scattering polarization is about a few percent in the wings and
  the order of 0.1% in the core near the solar limb, as it had been
  theoretically predicted, and that both polarization signals have a
  conspicuous spatio-temporal variability. CLASP also observed another
  upper-chromospheric line, Si III (120.65 nm), whose critical field
  strength for the Hanle effect is 290 G, and showed a measurable
  scattering polarization of a few % in this line. The polarization
  properties of the Si III line could facilitate the interpretation of
  the scattering polarization observed in the Lyman-alpha line.In this
  presentation, we would like to show how the upper chromosphere and
  transition region are seen in the polarization of these UV lines and
  discuss the possible source of these complicated polarization signals.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of the Universal Tunable Filter and High-resolution
    Imaging Observation with the Fuxian Solar Observatory
Authors: Hagino, M.; Ichimoto, K.; Ueno, S.; Kimura, G.; Otsuji, K.;
   Kitai, R.; Zhong, L.; Xu, Z.; Shinoda, K.; Hara, H.; Suematsu, Y.;
   Shimizu, T.
2016ASPC..504..103H    Altcode:
  We have developed a new narrow-band universal tunable filter to perform
  imaging spectroscopy of the solar chromosphere. The development stage
  of the filter has been almost finished and we shifted to the scientific
  observation phase by using large grand-based telescopes. Using the
  filter, a series of high-resolution images were obtained with the 1m
  vacuum solar telescope at the Fuxian Solar Observatory. We succeeded in
  observing several flares and fine structures of the chromospheric layer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis of horizontal flows in the solar granulation
Authors: Quintero Noda, C.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu, Y.
2016MNRAS.457.1703Q    Altcode: 2016arXiv160103814Q
  Solar limb observations sometimes reveal the presence of a satellite
  lobe in the blue wing of the Stokes I profile from pixels belonging to
  granules. The presence of this satellite lobe has been associated in
  the past to strong line-of-sight gradients and, as the line-of-sight
  component is almost parallel to the solar surface, to horizontal
  granular flows. We aim to increase the knowledge about these horizontal
  flows studying a spectropolarimetric observation of the north solar
  pole. We will make use of two state of the art techniques, the spatial
  deconvolution procedure that increases the quality of the data removing
  the stray light contamination, and spectropolarimetric inversions that
  will provide the vertical stratification of the atmospheric physical
  parameters where the observed spectral lines form. We inverted the
  Stokes profiles using a two component configuration, obtaining that
  one component is strongly blueshifted and displays a temperature
  enhancement at upper photospheric layers while the second component has
  low redshifted velocities and it is cool at upper layers. In addition,
  we examined a large number of cases located at different heliocentric
  angles, finding smaller velocities as we move from the centre to the
  edge of the granule. Moreover, the height location of the enhancement
  on the temperature stratification of the blueshifted component also
  evolves with the spatial location on the granule being positioned on
  lower heights as we move to the periphery of the granular structure.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Herschel far-infrared photometry of the Swift Burst Alert
    Telescope active galactic nuclei sample of the local universe -
    II. SPIRE observations
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Meléndez, Marcio; Mushotzky, Richard F.;
   Koss, Michael J.; Barger, Amy J.; Cowie, Lennox L.
2016MNRAS.456.3335S    Altcode: 2015arXiv151202733S
  We present far-infrared (FIR) and submillimetre photometry from
  the Herschel Space Observatory's Spectral and Photometric Imaging
  Receiver (SPIRE) for 313 nearby (z &lt; 0.05) active galactic nuclei
  (AGN). We selected AGN from the 58 month Swift Burst Alert Telescope
  (BAT) catalogue, the result of an all-sky survey in the 14-195 keV
  energy band, allowing for a reduction in AGN selection effects due to
  obscuration and host galaxy contamination. We find 46 per cent (143/313)
  of our sample is detected at all three wavebands and combined with
  our Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) observations
  represents the most complete FIR spectral energy distributions of local,
  moderate-luminosity AGN. We find no correlation among the 250, 350, and
  500 μm luminosities with 14-195 keV luminosity, indicating the bulk
  of the FIR emission is not related to the AGN. However, Seyfert 1s do
  show a very weak correlation with X-ray luminosity compared to Seyfert
  2s and we discuss possible explanations. We compare the SPIRE colours
  (F<SUB>250</SUB>/F<SUB>350</SUB> and F<SUB>350</SUB>/F<SUB>500</SUB>)
  to a sample of normal star-forming galaxies, finding the two samples are
  statistically similar, especially after matching in stellar mass. But
  a colour-colour plot reveals a fraction of the Herschel-BAT AGN are
  displaced from the normal star-forming galaxies due to excess 500
  μm emission (E<SUB>500</SUB>). Our analysis shows E<SUB>500</SUB>
  is strongly correlated with the 14-195 keV luminosity and 3.4/4.6 μm
  flux ratio, evidence the excess is related to the AGN. We speculate
  these sources are experiencing millimetre excess emission originating
  in the corona of the accretion disc.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode magnetic-field observations of solar flares for
    exploring the energy storage and trigger mechanisms
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Inoue, Satoshi; Kawabata, Yusuke
2016IAUS..320..175S    Altcode:
  The spectro-polarimeter in the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope (SOT)
  is one of the powerful instruments for the most accurate measurements
  of vector magnetic fields on the solar surface. The magnetic field
  configuration and possible candidates for flare trigger are briefly
  discussed with some SOT observations of solar flare events, which
  include X5.4/X1.3 flares on 7 March 2012, X1.2 flare on 7 January
  2014 and two M-class flares on 2 February 2014. Especially, using an
  unique set of the Hinode and SDO data for the X5.4/X1.3 flares on 7
  March 2012, we briefly reviewed remarkable properties observed in the
  spatial distribution of the photospheric magnetic flux, chromospheric
  flare ribbons, and the 3D coronal magnetic field structure inferred
  by non-linear force-free field modeling with the Hinode photospheric
  magnetic field data.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of a Precise Polarization Modulator for UV
    Spectropolarimetry
Authors: Ishikawa, S.; Shimizu, T.; Kano, R.; Bando, T.; Ishikawa,
   R.; Giono, G.; Tsuneta, S.; Nakayama, S.; Tajima, T.
2015SoPh..290.3081I    Altcode: 2015arXiv150905716I; 2015SoPh..tmp..120I
  We developed a polarization modulation unit (PMU) to rotate a
  waveplate continuously in order to observe solar magnetic fields
  by spectropolarimetry. The non-uniformity of the PMU rotation may
  cause errors in the measurement of the degree of linear polarization
  (scale error) and its angle (crosstalk between Stokes-Q and -U ),
  although it does not cause an artificial linear polarization signal
  (spurious polarization). We rotated a waveplate with the PMU to obtain
  a polarization modulation curve and estimated the scale error and
  crosstalk caused by the rotation non-uniformity. The estimated scale
  error and crosstalk were &lt;0.01 % for both. This PMU will be used as
  a waveplate motor for the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha SpectroPolarimeter
  (CLASP) rocket experiment. We confirm that the PMU performs and
  functions sufficiently well for CLASP.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: 3D magnetic field configuration of small-scale reconnection
    events in the solar plasma atmosphere
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2015PhPl...22j1207S    Altcode: 2015arXiv150805481S
  The outer solar atmosphere, i.e., the corona and the chromosphere,
  is replete with small energy-release events, which are accompanied
  by transient brightening and jet-like ejections. These events are
  considered to be magnetic reconnection events in the solar plasma, and
  their dynamics have been studied using recent advanced observations
  from the Hinode spacecraft and other observatories in space and on
  the ground. These events occur at different locations in the solar
  atmosphere and vary in their morphology and amount of the released
  energy. The magnetic field configurations of these reconnection
  events are inferred based on observations of magnetic fields at
  the photospheric level. Observations suggest that these magnetic
  configurations can be classified into two groups. In the first group,
  two anti-parallel magnetic fields reconnect to each other, yielding
  a 2D emerging flux configuration. In the second group, helical or
  twisted magnetic flux tubes are parallel or at a relative angle to each
  other. Reconnection can occur only between anti-parallel components
  of the magnetic flux tubes and may be referred to as component
  reconnection. The latter configuration type may be more important
  for the larger class of small-scale reconnection events. The two
  types of magnetic configurations can be compared to counter-helicity
  and co-helicity configurations, respectively, in laboratory plasma
  collision experiments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Moonraker and Tetris: Japanese Microrovers for Lunar Cave
    Exploration
Authors: Yoshida, K.; Britton, N.; Walker, J.; Shimizu, T.; Tanaka,
   T.; Hakamada, T.
2015LPICo1883.9036Y    Altcode:
  A Japanese team HAKUTO is developing a robotic system for exploration
  of Lunar lava tubes. Motivated by Google Lunar XPRIZE that requires
  500 m travel on any surface of Moon, but the team plans to go down
  into a skylight in Lacus Mortis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Decreased specific star formation rates in AGN host galaxies
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Mushotzky, Richard F.; Meléndez, Marcio;
   Koss, Michael; Rosario, David J.
2015MNRAS.452.1841S    Altcode: 2015arXiv150607039S
  We investigate the location of an ultra-hard X-ray selected sample
  of active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the Swift Burst Alert Telescope
  (BAT) catalogue with respect to the main sequence (MS) of star-forming
  galaxies using Herschel-based measurements of the star formation rate
  (SFR) and M<SUB>*</SUB>'s from Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry where
  the AGN contribution has been carefully removed. We construct the MS
  with galaxies from the Herschel Reference Survey and Herschel Stripe 82
  Survey using the exact same methods to measure the SFR and M<SUB>*</SUB>
  as the Swift/BAT AGN. We find that a large fraction of the Swift/BAT
  AGN lie below the MS indicating decreased specific SFR (sSFR) compared
  to non-AGN galaxies. The Swift/BAT AGN are then compared to a high-mass
  galaxy sample (CO Legacy Database for GALEX Arecibo SDSS Survey, COLD
  GASS), where we find a similarity between the AGN in COLD GASS and
  the Swift/BAT AGN. Both samples of AGN lie firmly between star-forming
  galaxies on the MS and quiescent galaxies far below the MS. However,
  we find no relationship between the X-ray luminosity and distance from
  the MS. While the morphological distribution of the BAT AGN is more
  similar to star-forming galaxies, the sSFR of each morphology is more
  similar to the COLD GASS AGN. The merger fraction in the BAT AGN is much
  higher than the COLD GASS AGN and star-forming galaxies and is related
  to distance from the MS. These results support a model in which bright
  AGN tend to be in high-mass star-forming galaxies in the process of
  quenching which eventually starves the supermassive black hole itself.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: CLASP: A UV Spectropolarimeter on a Sounding Rocket for
    Probing theChromosphere-Corona Transition Regio
Authors: Ishikawa, Ryohko; Kano, Ryouhei; Winebarger, Amy; Auchere,
   Frederic; Trujillo Bueno, Javier; Bando, Takamasa; Narukage,
   Noriyuki; Kobayashi, Ken; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Ishikawa,
   Shin-nosuke; Giono, Gabriel; Tsuneta, Saku; Hara, Hirohisa; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Sakao, Taro; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Cirtain, Jonathan; De Pontieu, Bart; Casini, Roberto; Manso Sainz,
   Rafael; Asensio Ramos, Andres; Stepan, Jiri; Belluzzi, Luca
2015IAUGA..2254536I    Altcode:
  The wish to understand the energetic phenomena of the outer solar
  atmosphere makes it increasingly important to achieve quantitative
  information on the magnetic field in the chromosphere-corona
  transition region. To this end, we need to measure and model the
  linear polarization produced by scattering processes and the Hanle
  effect in strong UV resonance lines, such as the hydrogen Lyman-alpha
  line. A team consisting of Japan, USA, Spain, France, and Norway has
  been developing a sounding rocket experiment called the Chromospheric
  Lyman-alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP). The aim is to detect the
  scattering polarization produced by anisotropic radiation pumping in
  the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line (121.6 nm), and via the Hanle effect to
  try to constrain the magnetic field vector in the upper chromosphere
  and transition region. In this talk, we will present an overview
  of our CLASP mission, its scientific objectives, ground tests made,
  and the latest information on the launch planned for the Summer of 2015.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode magnetic-field observations of solar flares for
    exploring the energy storage and trigger mechanisms
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Inoue, Satoshi; Kawabata, Yusuke
2015IAUGA..2252467S    Altcode:
  Solar flares abruptly release the free energy stored as a non-potential
  magnetic field in the corona and may be accompanied by eruptions of
  the coronal plasma. Magnetic reconnection is considered as a physical
  process in which the magnetic energy is converted to kinetic energy,
  thermal energy, and particle acceleration, but the location of
  magnetic reconnection is difficult to identify directly because of
  low emission measure at the reconnection region. We are still lack of
  observational knowledge on the 3D magnetic configuration and physical
  conditions for leading to flare trigger. Accurate measurements of
  vector magnetic fields at the solar photosphere, provided by the Solar
  Optical Telescope onboard Hinode, help us in exploring how the free
  energy is stored in the solar atmosphere and how the release of the
  energy is triggered. This presentation will review the magnetic field
  configuration and possible candidates for flare trigger primarily based
  on Hinode observations of some large flare events, which may include
  X5.4/X1.3 flares on 7 March 2012, X1.2 flare on 7 January 2014 and two
  M-class flares on 2 February 2014. The 7 March 2012 events were observed
  in an active region with delta-type sunspots, showing a strong shear
  in the entire magnetic system. For the sheared magnetic structure,
  the inclusion of a small-scale trigger field was identified near the
  polarity inversion line with excitation of a high-speed material
  flow in the horizontally oriented magnetic field formed nearly in
  parallel to the polarity inversion line. The observations suggest that
  gas dynamics at the solar surface play a vital role of leading to the
  onset of flares. The 7 January 2014 event is an exceptional event which
  most scientists would not be able to predict its occurrence. The flare
  unexpectedly happened apart from the sheared magnetic field region. The
  M-class flares on 2 February 2014 were observed in the magnetic field
  configuration, in which four magnetic domains were distributed on the
  solar surface and a null point might be formed in the coronal magnetic
  field originating from the four magnetic domains.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode SOT Plate Scale Reinvestigated by G-Band Images on
    the 2012 Transit of Venus
Authors: Kanao, M.; Shimizu, T.; Imamura, T.; Nakamura, M.
2015SoPh..290.1491K    Altcode: 2015SoPh..tmp...40K
  The Hinode Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) successfully observed the
  transit of Venus with an unprecedented high spatial resolution on 5 -
  6 June 2012, providing images of the aureole refracted by the atmosphere
  of Venus and the dark Venus disk against the bright solar surface. The
  transit of Venus provided a unique opportunity for calibrating the plate
  scale of SOT images. With the examination of the radius of the dark
  Venus disk, we determined the plate scale of G-band 430.5 nm images
  with high accuracy: 0.05369±0.00005 arcsec pixel<SUP>−1</SUP>. The
  radius was defined at the intensity level of the 0.5 transmittance
  and compared with the angular radius of Venus including the thickness
  of the atmosphere determined with the measurements of SPICAV onboard
  Venus Express. Thanks to the high spatial resolution, SOT images show
  that the dark Venus can be well represented by an ellipse. We observed
  7.6 km difference in altitude between the equator and the polar regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-speed photospheric material flow observed at the polarity
    inversion line of a δ-type sunspot producing an X5.4 flare on 2012
    March 7
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Lites, Bruce W.; Bamba, Yumi
2014PASJ...66S..14S    Altcode: 2014arXiv1406.1617S; 2014PASJ..tmp..101S
  Solar flares abruptly release the free energy stored as a non-potential
  magnetic field in the corona and may be accompanied by eruptions
  of the coronal plasma. Formation of a non-potential magnetic field
  and the mechanisms for triggering the onset of flares are still
  poorly understood. In particular, photospheric dynamics observed
  near those polarity inversion lines that are sites of major flare
  production have not been well observed with high spatial resolution
  spectro-polarimetry. This paper reports on a remarkable high-speed
  material flow observed along the polarity inversion line located between
  flare ribbons at the main energy release side of an X5.4 flare on 2012
  March 7. Observations were carried out by the spectro-polarimeter of
  the Solar Optical Telescope on board Hinode. The high-speed material
  flow was observed in the horizontally oriented magnetic field formed
  nearly parallel to the polarity inversion line. This flow persisted from
  at least six hours before the onset of the flare, and continued for at
  least several hours after the onset of the flare. Observations suggest
  that the observed material flow represents neither the emergence nor
  convergence of the magnetic flux. Rather, it may be considered to be
  material flow working both to increase the magnetic shear along the
  polarity inversion line and to develop magnetic structures favorable
  for the onset of the eruptive flare.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Sounding Rocket Experiment for the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha
    Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP)
Authors: Kubo, M.; Kano, R.; Kobayashi, K.; Bando, T.; Narukage, N.;
   Ishikawa, R.; Tsuneta, S.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ishikawa, S.; Suematsu, Y.;
   Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Goto, M.; Holloway,
   T.; Winebarger, A.; Cirtain, J.; De Pontieu, B.; Casini, R.; Auchère,
   F.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Manso Sainz, R.; Belluzzi, L.; Asensio Ramos,
   A.; Štěpán, J.; Carlsson, M.
2014ASPC..489..307K    Altcode:
  A sounding-rocket experiment called the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha
  Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) is presently under development to measure
  the linear polarization profiles in the hydrogen Lyman-alpha (Lyα)
  line at 121.567 nm. CLASP is a vacuum-UV (VUV) spectropolarimeter to aim
  for first detection of the linear polarizations caused by scattering
  processes and the Hanle effect in the Lyα line with high accuracy
  (0.1%). This is a fist step for exploration of magnetic fields in
  the upper chromosphere and transition region of the Sun. Accurate
  measurements of the linear polarization signals caused by scattering
  processes and the Hanle effect in strong UV lines like Lyα are
  essential to explore with future solar telescopes the strength
  and structures of the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere and
  transition region of the Sun. The CLASP proposal has been accepted by
  NASA in 2012, and the flight is planned in 2015.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Herschel Far-infrared Photometry of the Swift Burst Alert
    Telescope Active Galactic Nuclei Sample of the Local Universe. I. PACS
    Observations
Authors: Meléndez, M.; Mushotzky, R. F.; Shimizu, T. T.; Barger,
   A. J.; Cowie, L. L.
2014ApJ...794..152M    Altcode: 2014arXiv1408.5889M
  Far-Infrared (FIR) photometry from the Photodetector Array Camera
  and Spectrometer on the Herschel Space Observatory is presented for
  313 nearby, hard X-ray selected galaxies from the 58 month Swift Burst
  Alert Telescope (BAT) Active Galactic Nuclei catalog. The present data
  do not distinguish between the FIR luminosity distributions at 70 and
  160 μm for Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 galaxies. This result suggests that
  if the FIR emission is from the nuclear obscuring material surrounding
  the accretion disk, then it emits isotropically, independent of
  orientation. Alternatively, a significant fraction of the 70 and 160
  μm luminosity could be from star formation, independent of active
  galactic nucleus (AGN) type. Using a non-parametric test for partial
  correlation with censored data, we find a statistically significant
  correlation between the AGN intrinsic power (in the 14-195 keV band)
  and the FIR emission at 70 and 160 μm for Seyfert 1 galaxies. We find
  no correlation between the 14-195 keV and FIR luminosities in Seyfert
  2 galaxies. The observed correlations suggest two possible scenarios:
  (1) if we assume that the FIR luminosity is a good tracer of star
  formation, then there is a connection between star formation and
  the AGN at sub-kiloparsec scales, or (2) dust heated by the AGN has
  a statistically significant contribution to the FIR emission. Using
  a Spearman rank-order analysis, the 14-195 keV luminosities for the
  Seyfert 1 and 2 galaxies are weakly statistically correlated with the
  F <SUB>70</SUB>/F <SUB>160</SUB> ratios. <P />Herschel is an ESA space
  observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal
  Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Large aperture solar optical telescope and instruments for
    the SOLAR-C mission
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Hara, H.; Kano, R.; Shimizu,
   T.; Ichimoto, K.
2014SPIE.9143E..1PS    Altcode:
  A large aperture solar optical telescope and its instruments
  for the SOLAR-C mission are under study to provide the critical
  physical parameters in the lower solar atmosphere and to resolve the
  mechanism of magnetic dynamic events happening there and in the upper
  atmosphere as well. For the precise magnetic field measurements and
  high angular resolution in wide wavelength region, covering FOV of 3
  arcmin x3 arcmin, an entrance aperture of 1.4 m Gregorian telescope is
  proposed. Filtergraphs are designed to realize high resolution imaging
  and pseudo 2D spectro-polarimetry in several magnetic sensitive lines of
  both photosphere and chromosphere. A full stokes polarimetry is carried
  out at three magnetic sensitive lines with a four-slit spectrograph
  of 2D image scanning mechanism. We present a progress in optical and
  structural design of SOLAR-C large aperture optical telescope and its
  observing instruments which fulfill science requirements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of a universal tunable filter for future solar
    observations
Authors: Hagino, M.; Ichimoto, K.; Kimura, G.; Nakatani, Y.; Kawate,
   T.; Shinoda, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.
2014SPIE.9151E..5VH    Altcode:
  We have developed a new narrowband tunable filter to perform imaging
  spectroscopy of the solar chromosphere. Using Liquid Crystal Variable
  Retarders (LCVRs) as the tuning elements for wavelength, wide-band
  polarizers and super achromatic half-wave plates, it is possible to make
  high speed tuning (about 0.1Sec), to exclude mechanical drives (and oil
  tank), and to cover a wide wavelength range (510-100nm). This filter
  builds up with seven stages each consisting of a pair of calcites,
  LCVR, half-wave plates and linear polarizer. The full width at half
  maximum (FWHM) of the filter transmission is about 0.025nm at 656.3nm.We
  demonstrate that the concept of the universal tunable filter using the
  LCVR's as tuning elements is highly promising for future application
  to space mission and ground based observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: New developments in rotating and linear motion mechanisms
    used in contamination sensitive space telescopes
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Watanabe, Kyoko; Nakayama, Satoshi;
   Tajima, Takao; Obara, Shingo; Imada, Shinsuke; Nishizuka, Naoto;
   Ishikawa, Shin-nosuke; Hara, Hirohisa
2014SPIE.9151E..38S    Altcode:
  We have been developing a rotating mechanism and a linear motion
  mechanism for their usage in contamination sensitive space
  telescopes. They both are needed for ~1.4 meter optical telescope
  and its focal plane instrument onboard SOLAR-C, the next-generation
  spaceborne solar observatory following Hinode. Highly reliable long life
  performance, low outgassing properties, and low level of micro-vibration
  are required along with their scientific performance. With the
  proto-type mechanisms, the long life performance and outgassing
  properties of the mechanisms have been evaluated in vacuum chambers. The
  level of micro-vibration excited during the operations of the rotating
  mechanism was measured by operating it on the Kestler table. This
  paper provides the overall descriptions of our mechanism developments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Do Most Active Galactic Nuclei Live in High Star Formation
    Nuclear Cusps?
Authors: Mushotzky, Richard F.; Shimizu, T. Taro; Meléndez, Marcio;
   Koss, Michael
2014ApJ...781L..34M    Altcode: 2013arXiv1312.7766M
  We present early results of the Herschel PACS (70 and 160 μm) and
  SPIRE (250, 350, and 500 μm) survey of 313 low redshift (z &lt; 0.05),
  ultra-hard X-ray (14-195 keV) selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs)
  from the 58 month Swift/Burst Alert Telescope catalog. Selection of
  AGNs from ultra-hard X-rays avoids bias from obscuration, providing
  a complete sample of AGNs to study the connection between nuclear
  activity and star formation in host galaxies. With the high angular
  resolution of PACS, we find that &gt;35% and &gt;20% of the sources are
  "point-like" at 70 and 160 μm respectively and many more have their
  flux dominated by a point source located at the nucleus. The inferred
  star formation rates (SFRs) of 0.1-100 M <SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP>
  using the 70 and 160 μm flux densities as SFR indicators are consistent
  with those inferred from Spitzer Ne II fluxes, but we find that 11.25
  μm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon data give ~3× lower SFR. Using
  GALFIT to measure the size of the far-infrared emitting regions, we
  determined the SFR surface density (M <SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP>
  kpc<SUP>-2</SUP>) for our sample, finding that a significant fraction
  of these sources exceed the threshold for star formation driven winds
  (0.1 M <SUB>⊙</SUB> yr<SUP>-1</SUP> kpc<SUP>-2</SUP>). <P />Herschel
  is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by
  European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important
  participation from NASA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White-Light Emission and related Chromospheric Response in
    an X1.8-class Flare on 2012 October 23
Authors: Watanabe, Kyoko; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke
2014cosp...40E3604W    Altcode:
  In association with strong solar flares, we sometimes observe
  enhancements of visible continuum radiation, which is known as a
  ”white-light flare”. Because many observed events show a close
  correlation between the time profiles and locations of white-light
  emission, and the hard X-rays and/or radio emission, there is some
  consensus that the origin of white-light emission is non-thermal
  electrons. Generally, white-light emission is emitted from near the
  photosphere, however, non-thermal electrons are almost thermalized
  by the time they reach the lower chromosphere - and cannot reach
  the photosphere. So, still there is a problem concerning how the
  energy of non-thermal electrons propagates to the photosphere,
  and produces white-light emission. On October 23, 2012, white-light
  emission was observed by Hinode/SOT in association with the X1.8 class
  flare. Although the main phenomena of this solar flare occurred in a
  very compact region and the two Ca II H ribbons are separated by less
  than only 5 arcseconds, the white-light kernels are clearly observed
  along the Ca II H ribbons. Moreover, hard X-ray, and gamma-ray emission
  is present up to about 1 MeV, observed by the RHESSI satellite, and
  most of this emission is associated with the white-light kernels. The
  Hinode/EIS was also scanning over this flaring active region before the
  flare, and the flare occurred during the scan. Over the white-light
  kernel, strong red shifts were observed in FeXII etc. before the
  flare. In this paper, we will report the observed white-light emission,
  and chromospheric response obtained by the EUV observations. We also
  discuss the relationship between the downflows over the white-light
  kernel and the strength of the white-light emission, and try to show
  a possible prediction of how white-light emission can be produced by
  the transportation of non-thermal electrons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sunspot Bright Points
Authors: Choudhary, Debi Prasad; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2013SoPh..288..171C    Altcode: 2010arXiv1001.2354P
  We used the flux-calibrated images from the Broad-band Filter
  Imager and Stokes Polarimeter data obtained with the Solar Optical
  Telescope onboard the Hinode spacecraft to study the properties of
  bright points in and around sunspots. The selected bright points are
  smaller in diameter than 150 km with contrasts exceeding about 3 %
  in the ratio of sunspot images obtained with the G-band (430.5 nm)
  and Ca II H (396.85 nm) filters. The bright points are classified as
  umbral dot, peripheral umbral dot, penumbral grains, and G-band bright
  point depending on their location. The bright points are preferentially
  located around the penumbral boundary and in the fast decaying parts of
  the umbra. The color temperature of the bright points is in the range
  of 4600 K to 6600 K with cooler ones located in the central part of the
  umbra. The temperature increases as a function of distance from the
  center outward. The G-band, CN-band (388.35 nm), and Ca II H fluxes
  of the bright points as a function of their blue-band (450.55 nm)
  brightness increase continuously in a nonlinear fashion unlike their
  red (668.4 nm) and green (555.05 nm) counterparts. This is consistent
  with a model in which the localized heating of the flux tube depletes
  the molecular concentration, resulting in the reduced opacity that
  leads to the exposition of deeper and hotter layers. The light curve
  of the bright points shows that the enhanced brightness at these
  locations lasts for about 15 to 60 min with the least contrast for
  the points outside the sunspot. The umbral dots near the penumbral
  boundary are associated with elongated filamentary structures. The
  spectropolarimeter observations show that the filling factor decreases
  as the G-band brightness increases. We discuss the results using the
  model in which the G-band bright points are produced in the cluster
  of flux tubes that a sunspot consists of.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-wavelength Observations of the Spatio-temporal Evolution
    of Solar Flares with AIA/SDO. II. Hydrodynamic Scaling Laws and
    Thermal Energies
Authors: Aschwanden, Markus J.; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2013ApJ...776..132A    Altcode: 2013arXiv1308.5198A
  In this study we measure physical parameters of the same set of 155
  M- and X-class solar flares observed with AIA/SDO as analyzed in
  Paper I, by performing a differential emission measure analysis to
  determine the flare peak emission measure EM <SUB>p</SUB> , peak
  temperature T<SUB>p</SUB> , electron density n<SUB>p</SUB> , and
  thermal energy E <SUB>th</SUB>, in addition to the spatial scales L,
  areas A, and volumes V measured in Paper I. The parameter ranges
  for M- and X-class flares are log (EM<SUB> p </SUB>) = 47.0-50.5,
  T<SUB>p</SUB> = 5.0-17.8 MK, n<SUB>p</SUB> = 4 × 10<SUP>9</SUP>-9 ×
  10<SUP>11</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, and thermal energies of E <SUB>th</SUB>
  = 1.6 × 10<SUP>28</SUP>-1.1 × 10<SUP>32</SUP> erg. We find that these
  parameters obey the Rosner-Tucker-Vaiana (RTV) scaling law T_p^2 \propto
  n_p L and HvpropT <SUP>7/2</SUP> L <SUP>-2</SUP> during the peak time
  t<SUB>p</SUB> of the flare density n<SUB>p</SUB> , when energy balance
  between the heating rate H and the conductive and radiative loss rates
  is achieved for a short instant and thus enables the applicability
  of the RTV scaling law. The application of the RTV scaling law
  predicts power-law distributions for all physical parameters, which
  we demonstrate with numerical Monte Carlo simulations as well as with
  analytical calculations. A consequence of the RTV law is also that
  we can retrieve the size distribution of heating rates, for which we
  find N(H)vpropH <SUP>-1.8</SUP>, which is consistent with the magnetic
  flux distribution N(Φ)vpropΦ<SUP>-1.85</SUP> observed by Parnell
  et al. and the heating flux scaling law F<SUB>H</SUB> vpropHLvpropB/L
  of Schrijver et al.. The fractal-diffusive self-organized criticality
  model in conjunction with the RTV scaling law reproduces the observed
  power-law distributions and their slopes for all geometrical and
  physical parameters and can be used to predict the size distributions
  for other flare data sets, instruments, and detection algorithms.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Emission Height and Temperature Distribution of White-light
    Emission Observed by Hinode/SOT from the 2012 January 27 X-class
    Solar Flare
Authors: Watanabe, Kyoko; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Masuda, Satoshi;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Ohno, Masanori
2013ApJ...776..123W    Altcode: 2013arXiv1308.5059W
  White-light emissions were observed from an X1.7 class solar flare on
  2012 January 27, using three continuum bands (red, green, and blue) of
  the Solar Optical Telescope on board the Hinode satellite. This event
  occurred near the solar limb, and so differences in the locations of the
  various emissions are consistent with differences in heights above the
  photosphere of the various emission sources. Under this interpretation,
  our observations are consistent with the white-light emissions occurring
  at the lowest levels of where the Ca II H emission occurs. Moreover, the
  centers of the source regions of the red, green, and blue wavelengths
  of the white-light emissions are significantly displaced from each
  other, suggesting that those respective emissions are emanating from
  progressively lower heights in the solar atmosphere. The temperature
  distribution was also calculated from the white-light data, and we found
  the lower-layer emission to have a higher temperature. This indicates
  that high-energy particles penetrated down to near the photosphere,
  and deposited heat into the ambient lower layers of the atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for Hot Fast Flow above a Solar Flare Arcade
Authors: Imada, S.; Aoki, K.; Hara, H.; Watanabe, T.; Harra, L. K.;
   Shimizu, T.
2013ApJ...776L..11I    Altcode: 2013arXiv1309.3401I
  Solar flares are one of the main forces behind space weather
  events. However, the mechanism that drives such energetic phenomena is
  not fully understood. The standard eruptive flare model predicts that
  magnetic reconnection occurs high in the corona where hot fast flows are
  created. Some imaging or spectroscopic observations have indicated the
  presence of these hot fast flows, but there have been no spectroscopic
  scanning observations to date to measure the two-dimensional structure
  quantitatively. We analyzed a flare that occurred on the west solar
  limb on 2012 January 27 observed by the Hinode EUV Imaging Spectrometer
  (EIS) and found that the hot (~30MK) fast (&gt;500 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>)
  component was located above the flare loop. This is consistent with
  magnetic reconnection taking place above the flare loop.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Lyman Alpha SpectroPolarimeter: CLASP
Authors: Kobayashi, Ken; Kano, R.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Winebarger,
   A. R.; Cirtain, J. W.; Bando, T.; De Pontieu, B.; Ishikawa, R.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Kubo, M.; Narukage, N.; Sakao, T.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Auchère, F.; Asensio Ramos, A.; Belluzzi, L.; Carlsson, M.; Casini,
   R.; Hara, H.; Ichimoto, K.; Manso Sainz, R.; Shimizu, T.; Stepan,
   J.; Suematsu, Y.; Holloway, T.
2013SPD....44..142K    Altcode:
  The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) is a VUV
  spectropolarimeter optimized for measuring the linear polarization of
  the Lyman-alpha line (121.6 nm). The Lyman-alpha line is predicted to
  show linear polarization caused by atomic scattering in the chromosphere
  and modified by the magnetic field through the Hanle effect. The
  Hanle effect is sensitive to weaker magnetic fields than Zeeman
  effect, and is not canceled by opposing fields, making it sensitive
  to tangled or unresolved magnetic field structures. These factors make
  the Hanle effect a valuable tool for probing the magnetic field in the
  chromosphere above the quiet sun. To meet this goal, CLASP is designed
  to measure linear polarization with 0.1% polarization sensitivity
  at 0.01 nm spectral resolution and 10" spatial resolution. CLASP is
  scheduled to be launched in 2015.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The First Hard X-Ray Power Spectral Density Functions of
    Active Galactic Nucleus
Authors: Shimizu, T. Taro; Mushotzky, Richard F.
2013ApJ...770...60S    Altcode: 2013arXiv1304.7002S
  We present results of our power spectral density (PSD) analysis of
  30 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) using the 58 month light curves from
  Swift's Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) in the 14-150 keV band. PSDs were
  fit using a Monte Carlo based algorithm to take into account windowing
  effects and measurement error. All but one source were found to be
  fit very well using an unbroken power law with a slope of ~ - 1,
  consistent at low frequencies with previous studies in the 2-10 keV
  band, with no evidence of a break in the PSD. For five of the highest
  signal-to-noise ratio sources, we tested the energy dependence of
  the PSD and found no significant difference in the PSD at different
  energies. Unlike previous studies of X-ray variability in AGNs, we do
  not find any significant correlations between the hard X-ray variability
  and different properties of the AGN including luminosity and black hole
  mass. The lack of break frequencies and correlations seem to indicate
  that AGNs are similar to the high state of Galactic black holes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode observations of flares and active region emergence
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2013JPhCS.440a2002S    Altcode:
  After observing the quiet Sun during a long and deep minimum, Hinode's
  observing priority is now the active Sun, i.e., flares and active
  regions. Because of its small field-of-view instruments and telemetry
  restrictions, capturing major flares with good observing coverage
  needs challenging efforts on operation plannings for Hinode and we
  have been using the latest available AIA and HMI full-Sun images for
  targeting. Also, capturing the initial phase of large-scale emerging
  flux activities is not easy for Hinode without having the forecast of
  flux emergence before they are visible on the surface. Nevertheless,
  Hinode has some good examples of observations of such events. In this
  paper, we briefly discuss two specific observations; X-class flares
  in March 2012 and a large-scale flux emergence in December 2009. The
  Stokes polarimetry data for the flares presented in this paper reveals
  significant gas flows along the neutral line of the sheared magnetic
  distributions and the change of magnetic field inclination at the areas
  where penumbral development and disappearance was observed with the
  occurrence of the flares. The flux emergence and the sunspot formation
  presented were well monitored by the Hinode three telescopes from the
  beginning through the end of the emergence, Of particular interest is
  the finding of a precursory signature in the chromosphere preceding
  the appearance of sunspot penumbra.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Northern Galactic Cap AGN from the 58-month BAT Catalogue:
    A Comprehensive X-ray Spectral Study
Authors: Vasudevan, Ranjan; Brandt, W. N.; Mushotzky, R.; Winter,
   L. M.; Baumgartner, W. H.; Shimizu, T.; Nousek, J. A.; Schneider,
   D. P.; Gandhi, P.
2013HEAD...1310906V    Altcode:
  The all-sky hard X-ray Swift/BAT survey has provided the most complete
  census of local AGN activity to date, unbiased to all but the most
  heavy absorption levels. Continual monitoring in the 14--195 keV band
  has allowed the assembly of hard X-ray detected AGN catalogues after 9,
  22, 36, 58 and 70 months of operation, increasing the sample size by
  probing to fainter fluxes. The seminal study of Winter et al. (2009)
  presented a comprehensive X-ray analysis of the AGN in the 9-month
  catalogue, providing their absorption and luminosity distributions,
  characterising the spectral shape for each source in the catalogue,
  and allowing the determination of sample-wide properties for an
  unbiased AGN sample. We present a timely revision of this exercise for
  the latest publicly available 58-month BAT catalogue (flux limit 4 x
  10^-12 erg/s/cm^2 in the 14-195 keV band), focusing on the Northern
  Galactic Cap (b&gt;50 degrees). This sky area has excellent potential
  for further dedicated study due to a wide range of multi-wavelength data
  that are already available, and we propose it as a low-redshift analogue
  to the ‘deep field’ observations of AGN at higher redshifts. We
  consistently fit all the 100 objects in this sky region with a suite
  of models to determine the best fitting column densities, luminosities
  and spectral features (Iron lines, soft excesses and warm absorber
  edges). Comparison with previous works on the 9-month and 36-month
  catalogues now allows a better understanding of whether the deepening
  exposure of the BAT catalogue uncovers progressively different AGN
  properties. We find that ~60% of the sample is absorbed above logNH=22,
  9% is Compton thick, and Compton reflection is significant for the
  sample overall (average reflection amplitude &lt;R&gt; = 2.7). The
  sample is complete down to fluxes 4 times fainter than the 9-month
  catalogue in the 2--10 keV band. We emphasise the utility of this
  Northern Galactic Cap sample for a wide variety of future studies on
  AGN, and outline one such current project on the stacked emission from
  this sample and the connections with X-ray background synthesis models.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Hinode Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Akin, D. L.; Card, G.; Cruz, T.; Duncan, D. W.;
   Edwards, C. G.; Elmore, D. F.; Hoffmann, C.; Katsukawa, Y.; Katz, N.;
   Kubo, M.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Streander, K. V.;
   Suematsu, A.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.; Tsuneta, S.
2013SoPh..283..579L    Altcode:
  The joint Japan/US/UK Hinode mission includes the first large-aperture
  visible-light solar telescope flown in space. One component of the
  Focal Plane Package of that telescope is a precision spectro-polarimeter
  designed to measure full Stokes spectra with the intent of using those
  spectra to infer the magnetic-field vector at high precision in the
  solar photosphere. This article describes the characteristics of the
  flight hardware of the HinodeSpectro-Polarimeter, and summarizes its
  in-flight performance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Properties of a Decaying Sunspot
Authors: Balthasar, H.; Beck, C.; Gömöry, P.; Muglach, K.; Puschmann,
   K. G.; Shimizu, T.; Verma, M.
2013CEAB...37..435B    Altcode: 2013arXiv1301.1562B
  A small decaying sunspot was observed with the Vacuum Tower Telescope
  (VTT) on Tenerife and the Japanese Hinode satellite. We obtained
  full Stokes scans in several wavelengths covering different heights
  in the solar atmosphere. Imaging time series from Hinode and the
  Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) complete our data sets. The spot is
  surrounded by a moat flow, which persists also on that side of the
  spot where the penumbra already had disappeared. Close to the spot,
  we find a chromospheric location with downflows of more than 10 km
  s^{-1} without photospheric counterpart. The height dependence of
  the vertical component of the magnetic field strength is determined
  in two different ways that yielded different results in previous
  investigations. Such a difference still exists in our present data,
  but it is not as pronounced as in the past.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Next space solar observatory SOLAR-C: mission instruments
    and science objectives
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; Watanabe, T.; Hara, H.; Ichimoto, K.; Kubo,
   M.; Kusano, K.; Sakao, T.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.
2012IAUSS...6E.207K    Altcode:
  SOLAR-C, the fourth space solar mission in Japan, is under study with a
  launch target of fiscal year 2018. A key concept of the mission is to
  view the photosphere, chromosphere, and corona as one system coupled
  by magnetic fields along with resolving the size scale of fundamental
  physical processes connecting these atmospheric layers. It is especially
  important to study magnetic structure in the chromosphere as an
  interface layer between the photosphere and the corona. The SOLAR-C
  satellite is equipped with three telescopes, the Solar UV-Visible-IR
  Telescope (SUVIT), the EUV/FUV High Throughput Spectroscopic Telescope
  (EUVS/LEMUR), and the X-ray Imaging Telescope (XIT). Observations
  with SUVIT of photospheric and chromospheric magnetic fields make it
  possible to infer three dimensional magnetic structure extending from
  the photosphere to the chromosphere and corona.This helps to identify
  magnetic structures causing magnetic reconnection, and clarify how
  waves are propagated, reflected, and dissipated. Phenomena indicative
  of or byproducts of magnetic reconnection, such as flows and shocks,
  are to be captured by SUVIT and by spectroscopic observations using
  EUVS/LEMUR, while XIT observes rapid changes in temperature distribution
  of plasma heated by shock waves.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Instrument Design of the Large Aperture Solar UV Visible and
    IR Observing Telescope (SUVIT) for the SOLAR-C Mission
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Takeyama, N.
2012ASPC..463..439S    Altcode:
  We present an instrumental design of one major solar observation payload
  planned for the SOLAR-C mission: the Solar Ultra-violet Visible and
  near IR observing Telescope (SUVIT). The SUVIT is designed to provide
  high-angular-resolution investigation of the lower solar atmosphere,
  from the photosphere to the uppermost chromosphere, with enhanced
  spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric capability in wide wavelength
  regions from 280 nm (Mg II h&amp;k lines) to 1100 nm (He I 1083 nm
  line) with 1.5 m class aperture and filtergraphic and spectrographic
  instruments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode observations of the Venus corona during the 2012
    transit of Venus
Authors: Kanao, M.; Yamazaki, A.; Imada, S.; Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.;
   Kasaba, Y.; Sakanoi, T.; Kagitani, M.; Nakamura, M.
2012AGUFM.P11D1851K    Altcode:
  The Hinode satellite successfully observed the transit of Venus on
  5th June 2012 with the highest spatial resolution. This presentation
  will focus on UV and soft X-ray data acquired with the EUV Imaging
  Spectrometer (EIS) and the X-ray Telescope (XRT) onboard Hinode. We
  expected the EUV and X-ray emissions from the charge exchange reaction
  by the solar wind impacting on the neutral particles in Venus upper
  atmosphere. The neutral particles escape through the photoreaction, the
  solar wind pick-up process, and so on, in connection with the solar wind
  and the solar radiation. However, there are few precedent observations
  of the escaping hydrogen and oxygen, ranging from a few eV to a few keV
  because of difficulty in the groundbased observations. The atmosphere
  loss can be estimated based on the two-dimensional image of the neutral
  particle density. Our estimation was made for 18.4nm (OVI), 19.3nm (OV)
  and 25.6nm (HII), which intensity and line profiles can be recorded with
  EIS, and 1.72-2.18nm (OVII), 1.60-1.90nm(OVIII), 2.85-3.37nm (CVI),
  3.50-4.03 nm (CV), which are located in XRT's broadband range. Multi
  wavelength observation could clarify the collision velocities between
  the solar wind and Venus neutral particles. Before the transit of Venus,
  for science planning purpose, we estimated the EUV and X-ray emission
  intensities by using typical solar wind parameters (the proton density
  10/cc and the solar wind velocity 400 km/sec) with a Venus atmosphere
  model. The photon production rate of the X-ray emission is estimated
  to be 1.1 x 10^25 photons/s, and that of the OVI emission line (18.4nm)
  is 6.9 x 10^23 photons/s. These values are much lower than the emissions
  from the solar corona, but unexpected signals may be observed dureing
  the transit. In this presentation, we will present the calculation
  results on intensity distribution of the Venus corona and some X-ray
  and EUV data acquired during the transit. Also we briefly compare
  the observed intensities in dark Venus feature with the calculation
  results and discuss the signification of the difference.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Science and Instrument Design of 1.5-m Aperture Solar Optical
    Telescope for the SOLAR-C Mission
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.
2012IAUSS...6E.208S    Altcode:
  We present science cases and a design of one of major instruments for
  SOLAR-C mission; 1.5-m-class aperture solar ultra-violet visible and
  near IR observing Telescope (SUVIT). The SOLAR-C mission aims at fully
  understanding dynamism and magnetic nature of the solar atmosphere by
  observing small-scale plasma processes and structures. The SUVIT is
  designed to provide high-angular-resolution investigation of lower
  atmosphere from the photosphere to the uppermost chromosphere with
  enhanced spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric capability covering
  a wide wavelength region from 280 nm (Mg II h&amp;k) to 1100 nm (He
  I 1083 nm), using focal plane instruments: wide-band and narrow-band
  filtergraphs and a spectrograph for high-precision spectro-polarimetry
  in the solar photospheric and chromospheric lines. We will discuss
  about instrument design to realize the science cases.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Emission Height and Temperature Distribution of White-Light
    Emission from the 2011 January 27 Flare Observed by Hinode/SOT
Authors: Watanabe, K.; Shimizu, T.; Masuda, S.; Ichimoto, K.
2012AGUFMSH52B..03W    Altcode:
  White light flares are flares that show an emission enhancement in
  the visible continuum. White-light emissions are well correlated
  with hard X-ray and radio emissions in time profile and emission
  location. This seems to imply that the origin of white-light emission
  is accelerated particles, in particular non-thermal elections. However,
  this is hard to understand in terms of the expected respective emission
  heights. Theoretically, white-light emissions are generated near the
  photosphere, but non-thermal electrons of energy ~50-100 keV should
  deposit their energy in the lower chromosphere, more than 500 km
  above the photosphere. Thus there should be ~500 km difference in
  the white-light and X-ray emission heights, which seems at odds with
  the observations. We investigate this question with observations
  of a near-limb X1.7 flare of 27 January 2012, using three continuum
  bands (red, green, and blue) of the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope
  (SOT). The near-limb location allowed us to determine the heights of the
  emissions. We found the white-light emissions to be located low down,
  apparently at the photosphere, with the Ca II H emission originating
  from higher up. We also calculated the temperature distribution from the
  three white-light continuum bands, and found the lower layer to have
  higher temperature. These findings suggest that high energy particles
  penetrate to near the photosphere, heating the ambient atmosphere from
  very low (near photospheric) layers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional instability of two-dimensional fast magnetic
    reconnection in comparison with Petschek and Sweet-Parker models
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondoh, K.
2012AGUFMSM13B2372S    Altcode:
  Petschek and Sweet-Parker models are known as the controversial
  two-dimensional MHD models discussed in the magnetic reconnection
  problem of space plasma physics for more than 40 years. Recently, we
  numerically found that two-dimensional Petschek reconnection process is
  unstable for a three-dimensional resistive perturbation, resulting in
  intermittent and random three-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection. In
  this presentation, we discuss that such three-dimensional instability
  is not caused (i.e. stable) in the Sweet Parker reconnection
  process, where the magnetic diffusion region is not localized in
  the jet direction. In real space plasmas, many observations suggest
  that three-dimensionally localized fast magnetic reconnection is
  ubiquitously caused in approximately one-dimensional current sheet,
  such as a geomagneto-tail. Our study shows that Petschek reconnection
  model plays a crucial role there, rather than Sweet Parker model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LEMUR: Large European module for solar Ultraviolet
    Research. European contribution to JAXA's Solar-C mission
Authors: Teriaca, Luca; Andretta, Vincenzo; Auchère, Frédéric;
   Brown, Charles M.; Buchlin, Eric; Cauzzi, Gianna; Culhane, J. Len;
   Curdt, Werner; Davila, Joseph M.; Del Zanna, Giulio; Doschek, George
   A.; Fineschi, Silvano; Fludra, Andrzej; Gallagher, Peter T.; Green,
   Lucie; Harra, Louise K.; Imada, Shinsuke; Innes, Davina; Kliem,
   Bernhard; Korendyke, Clarence; Mariska, John T.; Martínez-Pillet,
   Valentin; Parenti, Susanna; Patsourakos, Spiros; Peter, Hardi; Poletto,
   Luca; Rutten, Robert J.; Schühle, Udo; Siemer, Martin; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Solanki, Sami K.; Spadaro, Daniele;
   Trujillo-Bueno, Javier; Tsuneta, Saku; Dominguez, Santiago Vargas;
   Vial, Jean-Claude; Walsh, Robert; Warren, Harry P.; Wiegelmann,
   Thomas; Winter, Berend; Young, Peter
2012ExA....34..273T    Altcode: 2011ExA...tmp..135T; 2011arXiv1109.4301T
  The solar outer atmosphere is an extremely dynamic environment
  characterized by the continuous interplay between the plasma and the
  magnetic field that generates and permeates it. Such interactions play a
  fundamental role in hugely diverse astrophysical systems, but occur at
  scales that cannot be studied outside the solar system. Understanding
  this complex system requires concerted, simultaneous solar observations
  from the visible to the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) and soft X-rays, at
  high spatial resolution (between 0.1” and 0.3”), at high temporal
  resolution (on the order of 10 s, i.e., the time scale of chromospheric
  dynamics), with a wide temperature coverage (0.01 MK to 20 MK,
  from the chromosphere to the flaring corona), and the capability of
  measuring magnetic fields through spectropolarimetry at visible and
  near-infrared wavelengths. Simultaneous spectroscopic measurements
  sampling the entire temperature range are particularly important. These
  requirements are fulfilled by the Japanese Solar-C mission (Plan B),
  composed of a spacecraft in a geosynchronous orbit with a payload
  providing a significant improvement of imaging and spectropolarimetric
  capabilities in the UV, visible, and near-infrared with respect to
  what is available today and foreseen in the near future. The Large
  European Module for solar Ultraviolet Research (LEMUR), described
  in this paper, is a large VUV telescope feeding a scientific payload
  of high-resolution imaging spectrographs and cameras. LEMUR consists
  of two major components: a VUV solar telescope with a 30 cm diameter
  mirror and a focal length of 3.6 m, and a focal-plane package composed
  of VUV spectrometers covering six carefully chosen wavelength ranges
  between 170 Å and 1270 Å. The LEMUR slit covers 280” on the Sun with
  0.14” per pixel sampling. In addition, LEMUR is capable of measuring
  mass flows velocities (line shifts) down to 2 km s<SUP> - 1</SUP> or
  better. LEMUR has been proposed to ESA as the European contribution
  to the Solar C mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design of large aperture solar optical telescope for the
    SOLAR-C mission
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.;
   Ichimoto, K.
2012SPIE.8442E..25S    Altcode:
  A large aperture optical telescope is planned for the next Japanese
  solar mission SOLAR-C as one of major three observing instruments. The
  optical telescope is designed to provide high-angular-resolution
  investigation of lower atmosphere from the photosphere to the uppermost
  chromosphere with enhanced spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric
  capability covering a wide wavelength region from 280 nm to 1100
  nm. The opto-mechanical and -thermal performance of the telescope is
  crucial to attain high-quality solar observations and we present a
  study of optical and structural design of the large aperture space
  solar telescope, together with conceptual design of its accompanying
  focal plane instruments: wide-band and narrow-band filtergraphs and
  a spectro-polarimeter for high spatial and temporal observations in
  the solar photospheric and chromospheric lines useful for sounding
  physical condition of dynamical phenomena.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Lyman-alpha spectro-polarimeter (CLASP)
Authors: Kano, Ryouhei; Bando, Takamasa; Narukage, Noriyuki; Ishikawa,
   Ryoko; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Ishikawa,
   Shin-nosuke; Hara, Hirohisa; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Sakao, Taro; Goto, Motoshi; Kato, Yoshiaki; Imada,
   Shinsuke; Kobayashi, Ken; Holloway, Todd; Winebarger, Amy; Cirtain,
   Jonathan; De Pontieu, Bart; Casini, Roberto; Trujillo Bueno, Javier;
   Štepán, Jiří; Manso Sainz, Rafael; Belluzzi, Luca; Asensio Ramos,
   Andres; Auchère, Frédéric; Carlsson, Mats
2012SPIE.8443E..4FK    Altcode:
  One of the biggest challenges in heliophysics is to decipher the
  magnetic structure of the solar chromosphere. The importance of
  measuring the chromospheric magnetic field is due to both the key role
  the chromosphere plays in energizing and structuring the outer solar
  atmosphere and the inability of extrapolation of photospheric fields to
  adequately describe this key boundary region. Over the last few years,
  significant progress has been made in the spectral line formation
  of UV lines as well as the MHD modeling of the solar atmosphere. It
  is found that the Hanle effect in the Lyman-alpha line (121.567 nm)
  is a most promising diagnostic tool for weaker magnetic fields in
  the chromosphere and transition region. Based on this groundbreaking
  research, we propose the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter
  (CLASP) to NASA as a sounding rocket experiment, for making the first
  measurement of the linear polarization produced by scattering processes
  and the Hanle effect in the Lyman-alpha line (121.567 nm), and making
  the first exploration of the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere
  and transition region of the Sun. The CLASP instrument consists
  of a Cassegrain telescope, a rotating 1/2-wave plate, a dual-beam
  spectrograph assembly with a grating working as a beam splitter, and
  an identical pair of reflective polarization analyzers each equipped
  with a CCD camera. We propose to launch CLASP in December 2014.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Laboratory Experiment of Magnetic Reconnection: Outflows,
    Heating, and Waves in Chromospheric Jets
Authors: Nishizuka, N.; Hayashi, Y.; Tanabe, H.; Kuwahata, A.; Kaminou,
   Y.; Ono, Y.; Inomoto, M.; Shimizu, T.
2012ApJ...756..152N    Altcode: 2014arXiv1412.7903N
  Hinode observations have revealed intermittent recurrent plasma
  ejections/jets in the chromosphere. These are interpreted as a result
  of non-perfectly anti-parallel magnetic reconnection, i.e., component
  reconnection, between a twisted magnetic flux tube and the pre-existing
  coronal/chromospheric magnetic field, though the fundamental physics of
  component reconnection is not revealed. In this paper, we experimentally
  reproduced the magnetic configuration and investigated the dynamics of
  plasma ejections, heating, and wave generation triggered by component
  reconnection in the chromosphere. We set plasma parameters as in the
  chromosphere (density 10<SUP>14</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, temperature 5-10
  eV, i.e., (5-10) × 10<SUP>4</SUP> K, and reconnection magnetic field
  200 G) using argon plasma. Our experiment shows bi-directional outflows
  with the speed of 5 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> at maximum, ion heating in the
  downstream area over 30 eV, and magnetic fluctuations mainly at 5-10
  μs period. We succeeded in qualitatively reproducing chromospheric
  jets, but quantitatively, we still have some differences between
  observations and experiments such as in jet velocity, total energy,
  and wave frequency. Some of them can be explained by the scale gap
  between solar and laboratory plasma, while the others are probably due
  to the difference in microscopy and macroscopy, collisionality, and the
  degree of ionization, which have not been achieved in our experiment.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The SOLAR-C Mission: Plan B Payload Concept
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Sakao, T.; Katsukawa, Y.; Group, J. S. W.
2012ASPC..454..449S    Altcode:
  The telescope concepts for the SOLAR-C Plan B mission as of the time of
  the Hinode-3 meeting were briefly presented for having comments from
  the international solar physics community. The telescope candidates
  are 1) near IR-visible-UV telescope with 1.5m aperture and enhanced
  spectro-polarimetric capability, 2) UV/EUV high throughput spectrometer,
  and 3) next generation X-ray telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Properties and Behaviors of a Sunspot Light Bridge
    in Terms of Magnetic Reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2012ASPC..454..177S    Altcode:
  The sunspot light bridge formed in the south-east of the well-developed
  sunspot in active region 10953 is one of interesting regions to
  understand magnetic environment responsible for exciting long-lasting
  occurrence of magnetic reconnection events. Temporal evolution of
  magnetic and velocity field properties over 4 days was studied and
  briefly discussed in this presentation, leading to a conclusion that
  the amount of twist may be one of key parameters for the occurrence
  of magnetic reconnection at the low atmosphere and the resulting
  dynamical behaviors.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A New Method of Determining the Pattern Speed of the LMC
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Yoshii, Y.
2012ASPC..458..341S    Altcode:
  We focus on the idea proposed by de Vaucouleurs that constellation III
  would be regarded as the Lagrange point in a rotating non-axisymmetric
  bar potential. Based on this idea, we identify the center of
  constellation III with the Lagrange point L4 and have determined the
  pattern speed of the LMC as 21 ± 3km/s/kpc. Using this pattern speed,
  we estimate the velocity with which the constellation III captures
  matter around, and we find that the estimated value of velocity is
  consistent with the observation. In this presentation, using the LMC
  we describe our method of determining a pattern speed and present the
  dynamics around each of the Lagrange points in detail.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Precursor of Sunspot Penumbral Formation Discovered with
    Hinode SOT Observation
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
2012ASPC..456...43S    Altcode:
  We newly found a precursory signature of sunspot penumbral formation
  in Ca II H images. The precursor is a dark annular zone (width 3"-5")
  around the umbra (pore), which was formed soon after the pore formation
  and existed until the penumbral formation. The penumbra was developed
  as if to fill the annular zone. Pre-existing ambient magnetic field
  islands were moved to be distributed at the outer edge of the annular
  zone and did not come into the zone. The observations indicate that
  the annular zone is different from sunspot moat flow region and that
  the zone is visible only in chromospheric Ca II H images, not in
  photospheric G-band images. We conclude that the annular zone reflects
  the formation of a magnetic canopy overlying the region surrounding
  the umbra at the chromospheric level, much before the formation of the
  penumbra at the photospheric level. We can predict the region and size
  of the penumbra, by looking at the appearance of dark zone around pores.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Fifth Hinode Science Meeting
Authors: Golub, L.; De Moortel, I.; Shimizu, T.
2012ASPC..456.....G    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Precursor of Sunspot Penumbral Formation Discovered with
    Hinode Solar Optical Telescope Observations
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori
2012ApJ...747L..18S    Altcode: 2012arXiv1202.1025S
  We present observations of a precursory signature that would be helpful
  for understanding the formation process of sunspot penumbrae. The Hinode
  Solar Optical Telescope successfully captured the entire evolution of a
  sunspot from the pore to a large well-developed sunspot with penumbra
  in an emerging flux region appearing in NOAA Active Region 11039. We
  found an annular zone (width 3”-5”) surrounding the umbra (pore)
  in Ca II H images before the penumbra formed around the umbra. The
  penumbra developed as if to fill the annular zone. The annular zone
  shows weak magnetogram signals, meaning less magnetic flux or highly
  inclined fields there. Pre-existing ambient magnetic field islands were
  distributed at the outer edge of the annular zone and did not come into
  the zone. There are no strong systematic flow patterns in the zone,
  but we occasionally observed small magnetic flux patches streaming
  out. The observations indicate that the annular zone is different from
  the sunspot moat flow region and that it represents the structure in the
  chromosphere. We conclude that the annular zone reflects the formation
  of a magnetic canopy overlying the region surrounding the umbra at the
  chromospheric level, long before the formation of the penumbra at the
  photospheric level. The magnetic field structure in the chromosphere
  needs to be considered in the formation process of the penumbrae.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Horizontal flow fields observed in Hinode G-band
    images. II. Flow fields in the final stages of sunspot decay
Authors: Verma, M.; Balthasar, H.; Deng, N.; Liu, C.; Shimizu, T.;
   Wang, H.; Denker, C.
2012A&A...538A.109V    Altcode: 2011arXiv1112.1589V
  Context. Generation and dissipation of magnetic fields is a fundamental
  physical process on the Sun. In comparison to flux emergence and the
  initial stages of sunspot formation, the demise of sunspots still
  lacks a comprehensive description. <BR /> Aims: The evolution of
  sunspots is most commonly discussed in terms of their intensity and
  magnetic field. Here, we present additional information about the
  three-dimensional flow field in the vicinity of sunspots towards
  the end of their existence. <BR /> Methods: We present a subset of
  multi-wavelengths observations obtained with the Japanese Hinode
  mission, the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), and the Vacuum Tower
  Telescope (VTT) at Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain during the
  time period 2010 November 18-23. Horizontal proper motions were derived
  from G-band and Ca ii H images, whereas line-of-sight velocities were
  extracted from VTT echelle Hα λ656.28 nm spectra and Fe i λ630.25 nm
  spectral data of the Hinode/Spectro-Polarimeter, which also provided
  three-dimensional magnetic field information. The Helioseismic and
  Magnetic Imager on board SDO provided continuum images and line-of-sight
  magnetograms, in addition to the high-resolution observations for the
  entire disk passage of the active region. <BR /> Results: We perform
  a quantitative study of photospheric and chromospheric flow fields
  in and around decaying sunspots. In one of the trailing sunspots of
  active region NOAA 11126, we observe moat flow and moving magnetic
  features (MMFs), even after its penumbra had decayed. We also detect
  a superpenumbral structure around this pore. We find that MMFs follow
  well-defined, radial paths from the spot all the way to the border of
  a supergranular cell surrounding the spot. In contrast, flux emergence
  near the other sunspot prevents the establishment of similar well
  ordered flow patterns, which could be discerned around a tiny pore of
  merely 2 Mm diameter. After the disappearance of the sunspots/pores,
  a coherent patch of abnormal granulation remained at their location,
  which was characterized by more uniform horizontal proper motions, low
  divergence values, and smaller photospheric Doppler velocities. This
  region, thus, differs significantly from granulation and other areas
  covered by G-band bright points. We conclude that this peculiar flow
  pattern is a signature of sunspot decay and the dispersal of magnetic
  flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamical Behaviors of the Solar Chromosphere Observed with
    Hinode Dynamics in Sunspot Light Bridges and Magnetic Reconnection
    Processes
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke
2012ASSP...33...23S    Altcode: 2012msdp.book...23S
  The Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope has revealed that the solar
  chromosphere is full of dynamical nature and much more dynamic than
  our thought. Observations of chromospheric dynamics in sunspot light
  bridges provides a new insight on the magnetic field topology for
  causing magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere and the process
  to supply and maintain the twisted flux in light bridges.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: One-dimensional Modeling for Temperature-dependent Upflow in
    the Dimming Region Observed by Hinode/EUV Imaging Spectrometer
Authors: Imada, S.; Hara, H.; Watanabe, T.; Murakami, I.; Harra,
   L. K.; Shimizu, T.; Zweibel, E. G.
2011ApJ...743...57I    Altcode: 2011arXiv1108.5031I
  We previously found a temperature-dependent upflow in the dimming region
  following a coronal mass ejection observed by the Hinode EUV Imaging
  Spectrometer (EIS). In this paper, we reanalyzed the observations along
  with previous work on this event and provided boundary conditions for
  modeling. We found that the intensity in the dimming region dramatically
  drops within 30 minutes from the flare onset, and the dimming region
  reaches the equilibrium stage after ~1 hr. The temperature-dependent
  upflows were observed during the equilibrium stage by EIS. The
  cross-sectional area of the flux tube in the dimming region does not
  appear to expand significantly. From the observational constraints,
  we reconstructed the temperature-dependent upflow by using a new method
  that considers the mass and momentum conservation law and demonstrated
  the height variation of plasma conditions in the dimming region. We
  found that a super-radial expansion of the cross-sectional area is
  required to satisfy the mass conservation and momentum equations. There
  is a steep temperature and velocity gradient of around 7 Mm from
  the solar surface. This result may suggest that the strong heating
  occurred above 7 Mm from the solar surface in the dimming region. We
  also showed that the ionization equilibrium assumption in the dimming
  region is violated, especially in the higher temperature range.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha SpectroPolarimeter (CLASP)j
Authors: Kobayashi, K.; Tsuneta, S.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Bando, T.;
   Belluzzi, L.; Casini, R.; Carlsson, M.; Cirtain, J. W.; De Pontieu,
   B.; Hara, H.; Ichimoto, K.; Ishikawa, R.; Kano, R.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Kim, T.; Kubo, M.; Manso Sainz, R.; Narukage, N.; Asensio Ramos,
   A.; Robinson, B.; Sakao, T.; Shimizu, T.; Stepan, J.; Suematsu, Y.;
   Watanabe, H.; West, E.; Winebarger, A. R.
2011AGUFM.P14C..05K    Altcode:
  We present an overview of the Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha
  SpectroPolarimeter (CLASP) program. CLASP is a proposed sounding rocket
  experiment currently under development as collaboration between Japan,
  USA and Spain. The aim is to achieve the first measurement of magnetic
  field in the upper chromosphere and transition region of the Sun
  through the detection and measurement of Hanle effect polarization
  of the Lyman alpha line. The Hanle effect (i.e. the magnetic field
  induced modification of the linear polarization due to scattering
  processes in spectral lines) is believed to be a powerful tool for
  measuring the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere, as it is more
  sensitive to weaker magnetic fields than the Zeeman effect, and also
  sensitive to magnetic fields tangled at spatial scales too small to be
  resolved. The Lyman-alpha (121.567 nm) line has been chosen because
  it is a chromospheric/transition-region line, and because the Hanle
  effect polarization of the Lyman-alpha line is predicted to be sensitive
  to 10-250 Gauss, encompassing the range of interest. Hanle effect is
  predicted to be observable as linear polarization or depolarization,
  depending on the geometry, with a fractional polarization amplitude
  varying between 0.1% and 1% depending on the strength and orientation of
  the magnetic field. This quantification of the chromospheric magnetic
  field requires a highly sensitive polarization measurement. The
  CLASP instrument consists of a large aperture (287 mm) Cassegrain
  telescope mated to a polarizing beamsplitter and a matched pair
  of grating spectrographs. The polarizing beamsplitter consists
  of a continuously rotating waveplate and a linear beamsplitter,
  allowing simultaneous measurement of orthogonal polarizations and
  in-flight self-calibration. Development of the instrument is underway,
  and prototypes of all optical components have been tested using a
  synchrotron beamline. The experiment is proposed for flight in 2014.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional shock formation in the spontaneous fast
    reconnection evolution
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2011AGUFMSM23B2040K    Altcode:
  Shock structure associated with magnetic reconnection is studied using
  three-dimensional magneto-hydro-dynamics simulations on the basis
  of the spontaneous fast reconnection model. In the two-dimensional
  reconnection, the angle between the slow shock pair (thickness of
  the plasma sheet) is smaller (thinner) in the region with higher
  reconnection rate. On the other hand, in the three-dimensional
  reconnection, the reconnection rate in the diffusion region is not
  uniform in the direction of sheet current, and the angle between
  the shock pair at the center of the diffusion region should be
  smallest. However, the profile of the angle in the direction of sheet
  current is not satisfied with this relationship. It is shown that this
  structure is caused by the inflow from the direction of the positive and
  negative sheet current and the inflow of the magnetic flux accompanied
  with it.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Reconnection in Non-equilibrium Ionization Plasma
Authors: Imada, S.; Murakami, I.; Watanabe, T.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.
2011ApJ...742...70I    Altcode: 2011arXiv1108.5026I
  We have studied the effect of time-dependent ionization and
  the recombination processes on magnetic reconnection in the solar
  corona. Petschek-type steady reconnection, in which the magnetic energy
  is mainly converted at the slow-mode shocks, was assumed. We carried out
  the time-dependent ionization calculation in the magnetic reconnection
  structure. We only calculated the transient ionization of iron;
  the other species were assumed to be in ionization equilibrium. The
  intensity of line emissions at specific wavelengths was also calculated
  for comparison with Hinode or other observations in future. We found
  the following: (1) iron is mostly in non-equilibrium ionization in the
  reconnection region; (2) the intensity of line emission estimated by
  the time-dependent ionization calculation is significantly different
  from that determined from the ionization equilibrium assumption;
  (3) the effect of time-dependent ionization is sensitive to the
  electron density in the case where the electron density is less than
  10<SUP>10</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP> (4) the effect of thermal conduction
  lessens the time-dependent ionization effect; and (5) the effect of
  radiative cooling is negligibly small even if we take into account
  time-dependent ionization.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three dimensional MHD spontaneous fast reconnection for the
    shear field effect and oblique neutral line formation
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.
2011AGUFMSM51B2088S    Altcode:
  Three-dimensional MHD instability for the spontaneous fast magnetic
  reconnection was studied under the shear field condition and the
  formation of oblique neutral line, in order to apply to space plasma
  observations in THEMIS and Cluster. In our previous studies under the
  current-driven anomalous resistivity, it was shown that one-dimensional
  current sheet (the Harris sheet) is unstable for three-dimensional
  resistive perturbation, resulting in three-dimensionally localized,
  intermittent and random fast reconnection process. In space plasmas,
  one-dimensional current sheet will be ubiquitous and is believed
  to be a source region of explosive plasma phenomena, such as solar
  flares and geomagnetic substorms. However, it was unclear how the 3D
  fast reconnection is localized in such 1D current sheet. According to
  our studies, the 3D fast reconnection can be triggered by any weak 3D
  effect, such as waves and plasma flows stagnating in the current sheet,
  and then is nonlinearly developed. Finally, the fast reconnection
  process becomes unsteady, intermittent and random. In recent, it was
  reported that the intermittent and snake-like plasma downflow jets often
  observed in solar flares, e.g. TRACE EUV data, can be well explained by
  our three-dimensional fast reconnection model. Then, we are now trying
  to apply our model to the geomagnetic substorms observed in THEMIS,
  Cluster and GEOTAIL. In comparison with solar flare observations, the
  observation data obtained in geomagnetic substorms is more fine, and
  hence, we can explore the details of how the 3D fast reconnection is
  caused. In this presentation, we report how our 3D fast reconnection
  model is modified by the shear field effect and oblique formation
  of active neutral lines, collaborating with observation data and MHD
  numerical study.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Extinction law in ultraluminous infrared galaxies at z∼ 1
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kawara, K.; Sameshima, H.; Ienaka, N.; Nozawa,
   T.; Kozasa, T.
2011MNRAS.418..625S    Altcode: 2011arXiv1107.5381S; 2011MNRAS.tmp.1436S
  We analyse the multiwavelength photometric and spectroscopic data of
  12 ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) at z∼ 1 and compare them
  with models of stars and dust in order to study the extinction law and
  star formation in young infrared (IR) galaxies. Five extinction curves,
  namely the Milky Way (MW), the pseudo-MW which is MW-like without
  the 2175 Å feature, the Calzetti and two supernova (SN) dust curves
  are applied to the data by combining with various dust distributions,
  namely the uniform dust screen, the clumpy dust screen, the internal
  dust geometry, and the composite geometry with a combination of dust
  screen and internal dust. Employing a minimum χ<SUP>2</SUP> method,
  we find that the foreground dust screen geometry, especially combined
  with the 8-40 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> SN extinction curve, provides a good
  approximation to the real dust geometry, whereas internal dust is only
  significant in two galaxies. The SN extinction curves, which are flatter
  than the others, reproduce the data of eight (67 per cent) galaxies
  better. Dust masses are estimated to be in excess of ∼10<SUP>8</SUP>
  M<SUB>⊙</SUB>. The inferred ages of the galaxies are small, eight
  of which range from 10 to 650 Myr. The SN-origin dust is the most
  plausible to account for the vast amount of dust masses and the flat
  slope of the observed extinction law. The inferred dust mass per SN
  ranges from 0.01 to 0.4 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> per SN.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Focal plane instrument for the Solar UV-Vis-IR Telescope
    aboard SOLAR-C
Authors: Katsukawa, Yukio; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Takeyama, Norihide
2011SPIE.8148E..0EK    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..13K
  It is presented the conceptual design of a focal plane instrument for
  the Solar UV-Vis-IR Telescope (SUVIT) aboard the next Japanese solar
  mission SOLAR-C. A primary purpose of the telescope is to achieve
  precise as well as high resolution spectroscopic and polarimetric
  measurements of the solar chromosphere with a big aperture of 1.5 m,
  which is expected to make a significant progress in understanding basic
  MHD processes in the solar atmosphere. The focal plane instrument
  consists of two packages: A filtergraph package is to get not only
  monochromatic images but also Dopplergrams and magnetograms using a
  tunable narrow-band filter and interference filters. A spectrograph
  package is to perform accurate spectro-polarimetric observations for
  measuring chromospheric magnetic fields, and is employing a Littrow-type
  spectrograph. The most challenging aspect in the instrument design is
  wide wavelength coverage from 280 nm to 1.1 μm to observe multiple
  chromospheric lines, which is to be realized with a lens unit including
  fluoride glasses. A high-speed camera for correlation tracking of
  granular motion is also implemented in one of the packages for an
  image stabilization system, which is essential to achieve high spatial
  resolution and high polarimetric accuracy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: LEMUR (Large European Module for solar Ultraviolet Research):
    a VUV imaging spectrograph for the JAXA Solar-C Mission
Authors: Korendyke, Clarence M.; Teriaca, Luca; Doschek, George A.;
   Harra, Louise K.; Schühle, Udo H.; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2011SPIE.8148E..0IK    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..17K
  LEMUR is a VUV imaging spectrograph with 0.28" resolution. Incident
  solar radiation is imaged onto the spectrograph slit by a single
  mirror telescope consisting of a 30-cm steerable f/12 off-axis
  paraboloid mirror. The spectrograph slit is imaged and dispersed by
  a highly corrected grating that focuses the solar spectrum over the
  detectors. The mirror is coated with a suitable multilayer with B4C
  top-coating providing a reflectance peak around 18.5 nm besides the
  usual B4C range above 500Å. The grating is formed by two halves, one
  optimized for performances around 185Å and the other above 500Å. Three
  intensified CCD cameras will record spectra above 50 nm while a large
  format CCD array with an aluminum filter will be used around 185Å.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Overview of Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha SpectroPolarimeter
    (CLASP)
Authors: Narukage, Noriyuki; Tsuneta, Saku; Bando, Takamasa; Kano,
   Ryouhei; Kubo, Masahito; Ishikawa, Ryoko; Hara, Hirohisa; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Watanabe, Hiroko; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Kobayashi, Ken; Robinson, Brian; Kim,
   Tony; Winebarger, Amy; West, Edward; Cirtain, Jonathan; De Pontieu,
   Bart; Casini, Roberto; Trujillo Bueno, Javier; Stepan, Jiri; Manso
   Sainz, Rafael; Belluzzi, Luca; Asensio Ramos, Andres; Carlsson, Mats
2011SPIE.8148E..0HN    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..16N
  The solar chromosphere is an important boundary, through which all of
  the plasma, magnetic fields and energy in the corona and solar wind
  are supplied. Since the Zeeman splitting is typically smaller than
  the Doppler line broadening in the chromosphere and transition region,
  it is not effective to explore weak magnetic fields. However, this is
  not the case for the Hanle effect, when we have an instrument with
  high polarization sensitivity (~ 0.1%). "Chromospheric Lyman- Alpha
  SpectroPolarimeter (CLASP)" is the sounding rocket experiment to detect
  linear polarization produced by the Hanle effect in Lyman-alpha line
  (121.567 nm) and to make the first direct measurement of magnetic
  fields in the upper chromosphere and lower transition region. To
  achieve the high sensitivity of ~ 0.1% within a rocket flight (5
  minutes) in Lyman-alpha line, which is easily absorbed by materials,
  we design the optical system mainly with reflections. The CLASP
  consists of a classical Cassegrain telescope, a polarimeter and a
  spectrometer. The polarimeter consists of a rotating 1/2-wave plate
  and two reflecting polarization analyzers. One of the analyzer also
  works as a polarization beam splitter to give us two orthogonal linear
  polarizations simultaneously. The CLASP is planned to be launched in
  2014 summer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The SOLAR-C mission: current status
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Hara, Hirohisa; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Kusano, Kanya; Sakao, Taro; Sekii, Takashi; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Watanabe, Tetsuya
2011SPIE.8148E..0BS    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..10S
  Two mission concepts (plan A: out-of-ecliptic mission and plan B:
  high resolution spectroscopic mission) have been studied for the next
  Japanese-led solar mission Solar-C, which will follow the scientific
  success of the Hinode mission. The both mission concepts are concluded
  as equally important and attractive for the promotion of space solar
  physics. In the meantime we also had to make efforts for prioritizing
  the two options, in order to proceed to next stage of requesting the
  launch of Solar-C mission at the earliest opportunity. This paper
  briefly describes the two mission concepts and the current status
  on our efforts for prioritizing the two options. More details are
  also described for the plan B option as the first-priority Solar-C
  mission. The latest report from the Solar-C mission concept studies
  was documented as "Interim Report on the Solar-C Mission Concept."

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Short telescope design of 1.5-m aperture solar UV visible
    and IR telescope aboard Solar-C
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Horiuchi, T.; Matsumoto, Y.; Takeyama, N.
2011SPIE.8148E..0DS    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..12S
  We present an optical and thermal design of one of major instrumental
  payload planned for SOLAR-C mission/Plan-B (high resolution
  spectroscopic option): the telescope assembly of Solar Ultra-violet
  Visible and near IR observing Telescope (SUVIT). To accommodate a
  launcher's nosecone size, a wide observing wavelength coverage from UV
  (down to 280 nm) through near IR (up to 1100 nm), and an 0.1 arcsec
  resolution in the field of 200 arcsec diameter, a short telescope
  design was made for a 1.5 m aperture solar Gregorian telescope with
  the compact design of three-mirror collimator unit.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: VizieR Online Data Catalog: Synthetic supernova extinction
    curves (Kawara+, 2011)
Authors: Kawara, K.; Hirashita, H.; Nozawa, T.; Kozasa, T.; Oyabu,
   S.; Matsuoka, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Sameshima, H.; Ienaka, N.
2011yCat..74121070K    Altcode:
  Synthetic spectra of stellar populations reddened by dust are modelled
  to reproduce the data of SST J1604+4304. This is a young IR galaxy at z=
  1.135 with the characteristic of ULIRGs. <P />(1 data file).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling and verification of the diffraction-limited visible
    light telescope aboard the solar observing satellite HINODE
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Shimizu, T.
2011SPIE.8336E..0FK    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8336E..14K
  HINODE, Japanese for "sunrise", is a spacecraft dedicated for
  observations of the Sun, and was launched in 2006 to study the Sun's
  magnetic fields and how their explosive energies propagate through the
  different atmospheric layers. The spacecraft carries the Solar Optical
  Telescope (SOT), which has a 50 cm diameter clear aperture and provides
  a continuous series of diffraction-limited visible light images from
  space. The telescope was developed through international collaboration
  between Japan and US. In order to achieve the diffraction-limited
  performance, thermal and structural modeling of the telescope was
  extensively used in its development phase to predict how the optical
  performance changes dependent on the thermal condition in orbit. Not
  only the modeling, we devoted many efforts to verify the optical
  performance in ground tests before the launch. The verification in
  the ground tests helped us to find many issues, such as temperature
  dependent focus shifts, which were not identified only through the
  thermal-structural modeling. Another critical issue was micro-vibrations
  induced by internal disturbances of mechanical gyroscopes and momentum
  wheels for attitude control of the spacecraft. Because the structural
  modeling was not accurate enough to predict how much the image quality
  was degraded by the micro-vibrations, we measured their transmission
  in a spacecraft-level test.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long-term Evolution of Magnetic and Dynamical Properties in
    A Sunspot Light Bridge
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2011ApJ...738...83S    Altcode:
  Sunspot light bridges (LBs)—long bright lanes appearing in
  umbra—sometimes show dynamical behaviors such as plasma ejections,
  brightenings, and fast gas flows in the photosphere and lower
  chromosphere, but we have not understood what causes these dynamics. The
  Hinode Solar Optical Telescope successfully captured the entire period
  of the evolution of an LB formed at the southeast of the well-developed
  sunspot in NOAA Active Region 10953, allowing us to track how magnetic
  and dynamical properties change with time for 3.5 days. The LB produced
  chromospheric upward ejections intermittently and recurrently on 2007
  April 30, and fewer upward ejections were observed on May 1. We found
  that G-band intensity features morphologically changed from cellar or
  patchy on April 30 to filamentary on May 1, although there were small
  changes in the magnetic flux density and inclination. This suggests that
  the chromospheric activity is related to the change of morphology in
  the photosphere. Fast gas flows and a pair of strong enhanced vertical
  electrical currents were also observed in the photosphere after the
  filamentary structures were dominant. The end of a large Hα filament
  (or prominence) was extended very close to the LB on May 1, suggesting
  that the filamentary structures formed along the LB may be magnetically
  connected to the large Hα filament and the gas flows may originate
  far from the LB region, although other mechanisms cannot be ruled out.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic field evolution of active regions and sunspots in
    connection with chromospheric and coronal activities
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2011IAUS..273..157S    Altcode:
  Ca II H imaging observations by the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope
  (SOT) have revealed that the chromosphere is extremely dynamic and
  that ejections and jets are well observed in moat region around
  sunspots. X-ray and EUV observations show frequent occurrence of
  microflaring activities around sunspots; small emerging flux or
  moving magnetic features approaching opposite pre-existing magnetic
  flux can be identified on the footpoints for half of microflares
  studied, while no encounters of opposite polarities are observed at
  footpoints for the others even with SOT high spatial magnetorams
  (Kano et al. 2010). Another observations tell the involvement of
  twisted magnetic fields in the microflares accompanied by no polarity
  encounters at the footpoints. Some type of sunspot light bridges shows
  recurrent occurrence of chromospheric ejections, and photospheric
  vector magnetic field data suggests that twsited magnetic flux tubes
  lying along light bridge play vital roles in producing such ejections
  (Shimizu et al. 2009). This presentation reviewed observational findings
  from these studies. We will need to understand the 3D configuration
  of magnetic fields for better understanding of activity triggers in
  the solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What determines the penumbral size and Evershed flow speed?
Authors: Deng, Na; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Choudhary, Debi Prasad;
   Wang, Haimin
2011IAUS..273..216D    Altcode: 2011arXiv1102.3164D
  Using Hinode SP and G-band observations, we examined the relationship
  between magnetic field structure and penumbral length as well as
  Evershed flow speed. The latter two are positively correlated with
  magnetic inclination angle or horizontal field strength within 1.5
  kilogauss, which is in agreement with recent magnetoconvective
  simulations of Evershed effect. This work thus provides direct
  observational evidence supporting the magnetoconvection nature of
  penumbral structure and Evershed flow in the presence of strong and
  inclined magnetic field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Bright Points In And Around Sunspots
Authors: Prasad Choudhary, Debi; Deng, N.; Shimizu, T.
2011SPD....42.1714P    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.1714P
  We used the flux calibrated images through the Broad Band Filter
  Imager and Stokes Polarimeter data obtained with the Solar Optical
  Telescope onboard the Hinode spacecraft to study the properties of
  sunspot bright points. The isolated bright points were selected and
  classified as umbral dot, peripheral umbral dot, penumbral grains and
  G-band bright point depending on their location. Most of the bright
  points are smaller than about 150 km, and not uniformly distributed
  over the umbra but preferentially located around the penumbral boundary
  and in the fast decaying parts of umbra. The color temperature of
  the bright points, derived using the continuum irradiance, are in the
  range of 4600 K to 6600 K with cooler ones located in the umbra. The
  temperature increases as a function of distance from the center to
  outside. The G-band, CN-band and CaII H flux of the bright points
  as a function of their blue band brightness increase continuously
  in a nonlinear fashion unlike their red and green counterpart. The
  scatter in CaII H irradiance is higher compared to the G-band and
  CN-band irradiance. The light curve of the bright points show that
  the enhanced brightness at these locations last for about 15 to 60
  minutes. The umbral dots near the penumbral boundary are associated
  with elongated filamentary structures. The G-band brightness closely
  follows their magnetic filling factor. Generally, the umbral dots have
  higher magnetic field and larger Doppler velocity compared to their
  counterpart outside the spot. These results are consistent with the
  model in which the upward intruding plasma through the nonmagnetic
  columns between the fluxtubes of sunspot produce the bright points and
  heat the matter inside of adjacent tubes. The heated plasma flows in
  the direction of reduced gas pressure. Similar localized heating of
  penumbra leads to the origin of penumbral grains.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of On-Disk Type I and II Spicules
Authors: Deng, Na; Denker, C.; Verma, M.; Shimizu, T.; Liu, C.;
   Wang, H.
2011SPD....42.1737D    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.1737D
  A coordinated observing campaign was carried out during 2010
  November 16-30 using German Vacuum Tower Telescope (VTT) and Hinode
  to investigate properties of small-scale spicules on the solar
  disk. The high-spectral resolution Echelle spectrograph at the VTT
  on Tenerife acquired spectra of the chromospheric halpha (656.28 nm)
  and photospheric Fe I (656.92 nm) lines in a region centered on a
  small pore. Hinode mission provides high-cadence vector magnetograms,
  G-band and Ca II H images, EIS and XRT observations of the same
  region. We present statistical properties of spicules (type I and II),
  such as spectral characteristics, velocities, spatial distribution and
  temporal evolution, paying particular attention to type II spicules or
  chromospheric jets. We investigate the photospheric magnetic structure,
  flow field and their evolution attempting to find the origin of
  chromospheric jets. The vertical extent of identified chromospheric
  jets in the transition region and corona will be studied using EIS
  and XRT observations in conjunction with SDO observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Supernova dust for the extinction law in a young infrared
    galaxy at z∼ 1
Authors: Kawara, K.; Hirashita, H.; Nozawa, T.; Kozasa, T.; Oyabu,
   S.; Matsuoka, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Sameshima, H.; Ienaka, N.
2011MNRAS.412.1070K    Altcode: 2010MNRAS.tmp.1877K; 2010arXiv1011.0511K
  We apply the supernova (SN) extinction curves to reproduce the
  observed properties of SST J1604+4304 which is a young infrared
  (IR) galaxy at z∼ 1. The SN extinction curves used in this work
  were obtained from models of unmixed ejecta of Type II supernovae
  for the Salpeter initial mass function with a mass range from 8 to
  30 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> or 8 to 40 M<SUB>⊙</SUB>. The effect of dust
  distributions on the attenuation of starlight is investigated by
  performing the χ<SUP>2</SUP> fitting method against various dust
  distributions. These are the commonly used uniform dust screen,
  the clumpy dust screen and the internal dust geometry. We add to
  these geometries three scattering properties, namely, no scattering,
  isotropic scattering and forward-only scattering. Judging from the
  χ<SUP>2</SUP> values, we find that the uniform screen models with
  any scattering property provide good approximations to the real dust
  geometry. Internal dust is inefficient to attenuate starlight and thus
  cannot be the dominant source of the extinction. We show that the SN
  extinction curves reproduce the data of SST J1604+4304 comparable to
  or better than the Calzetti extinction curve. The Milky Way extinction
  curve is not in satisfactory agreement with the data unless several
  dusty clumps are in the line of sight. This trend may be explained by
  the abundance of SN-origin dust in these galaxies; SN dust is the most
  abundant in the young IR galaxy at z∼ 1, abundant in local starbursts
  and less abundant in the Galaxy. If dust in SST J1604+4304 is dominated
  by SN dust, the dust production rate is ∼0.1 M<SUB>⊙</SUB> per SN.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Reconnection in the Solar Atmopshere Observed
    by Hinode
Authors: Imada, Shinsuke; Isobe, Hiroaki; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2011sswh.book...63I    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional MHD instability of spontaneous fast magnetic
    reconnection in geomagnetotail
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ogino, T.; Kondoh, K.
2010AGUFMSM51C1827S    Altcode:
  In recent multi-satellite observations such as THEMIS, various plasma
  dynamics related to the fast magnetic reconnection in geomagnetotail is
  actively studied. However, the three-dimensional structure of the fast
  magnetic reconnection itself is still unclear. According to our previous
  MHD studies, it has been revealed that two-dimensional spontaneous fast
  magnetic reconnection which can be quasi-steady state is unstable in
  three-dimensional perturbation, resulting in intermittent and unsteady
  three-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection even in one-dimensional
  current sheet. Those studies were successfully applied for solar flare
  observations such as TRACE EUV image data and, now, is tried to be
  applied for the geomagnetotail dynamics. In geomagnetotail, since the
  current sheet has a three-dimensional structure and may be disturbed
  by various geomagnetosphere’s three-dimensional plasma convections,
  the three-dimensional instability of fast magnetic reconnection process
  may be largely modified from the ideal and simple geometry models. In
  this study, using global three-dimensional MHD simulation including
  various interactions between solar winds and geomagnetosphere, it is
  visually shown that how the three-dimensional spontaneous fast magnetic
  reconnection is caused in geomagnetotail.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionization non-equilibrium plasma during magnetic reconnection
    in solar corona
Authors: Imada, S.; Murakami, I.; Watanabe, T.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.
2010AGUFMSH31A1788I    Altcode:
  Hinode can provide us both of the stored magnetic field energy in
  corona before magnetic reconnection and the most part of energy post
  reconnection stage. On the other hand, there is not enough observational
  knowledge of the physical parameters in the reconnection region. The
  inflow into the reconnection region, the temperature of the plasma in
  the reconnection region, and the temperatures and densities of the
  plasma jets predicted by reconnection, have not been quantitatively
  measured in sufficient. EIS on Hinode may provide some answers if
  solar cycle 24 ever produces a solar maximum. But it is important
  to answer why the most observation cannot detect the predicted flow
  or temperature in the reconnection region. One of the reasons why we
  cannot observe inside the magnetic reconnection region is due to its
  darkness. Generally we can see the bright cusp-like structure during
  solar flare, although the reconnection region is faint/blind. One may
  think that the temperature in the reconnection region is enough higher
  than that of cusp-like flare loops. Thus the wavelength of emission
  from reconnection region is different from flare loops. However, this
  is not entirely true. Magnetic reconnection causes rapid heating. Thus
  ionization cannot reach to the equilibrium stage. We have calculated
  the ionization process in the down stream of Petschek type magnetic
  reconnection. From our result, we can clearly see that plasma cannot
  reach the ionization equilibrium in the down stream of slow-mode
  shock. The typical emissions from magnetic reconnection region are
  FeIXX or FeXX, although the plasma temperature is equal to 40MK. The
  typical temperature and density of post flare loops are 10 MK and 10^11
  /cc, and the dominant emissions from post flare loops are from FeIXX
  to FeXXIII. Thus the wavelength of emission from reconnection region
  is not so much different from post flare loops. We will discuss how
  the emissions from reconnection region looks like by using several
  ionization calculations of magnetic reconnection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Experimental Simulation of Magnetic Reconnection in the
    Sunspot Light Bridge
Authors: Hayashi, Yoshinori; Tanabe, Hiroshi; Inomoto, Michiaki; Ono,
   Yasushi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Imada, Shinsuke; Nishizuka, Naoto
2010APS..DPPCP9122H    Altcode:
  Intermittent and recurrent chromospheric plasma ejections were
  discovered in the sunspot light bridge (LB) by the Solar Optical
  Telescope of the Hinode satellite (Shimizu et al. 2009, ApJ, 696,
  L66). Strong current was observed under the jet, suggesting existence
  of twisted flux tube in the vertical background field. The magnetic
  reconnection between the flux tube and the vertical field is considered
  to cause the plasma ejection. It is left unsolved why the intermittent
  reconnection continuing more than one day. Note that the magnetic
  configuration of LB is similar to the spheromak plasma maintained
  by vertical field in the laboratory. We formed spheromak in the TS-4
  device and drove magnetic reconnection with center solenoid coil. We
  measured 2D magnetic profile of the reconnecting field lines between
  the spheromak and the solenoid coil by the magnetic probe array and
  local temperature, density and plasma flow at the reconnection point
  by the Langmuir probes and ion Doppler spectroscopy. We will discuss
  about the LB reconnection by comparing the laboratory experiment with
  the satellite observation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observation of Photospheric Magnetic Activities
    Triggering X-ray Microflares Around a Well-developed Sunspot
Authors: Kano, R.; Shimizu, T.; Tarbell, T. D.
2010ApJ...720.1136K    Altcode:
  Microflares, which are small energetic events in the solar corona, are
  an example of dynamical phenomena suitable for understanding energy
  release processes in the solar corona. We identified 55 microflares
  around a well-developed sunspot surrounded by a moat with high-cadence
  X-ray images from the Hinode X-ray Telescope, and searched for their
  photospheric counterparts in line-of-sight magnetograms taken with the
  Hinode Solar Optical Telescope. We found opposite magnetic polarities
  encountering each other around the footpoints of 28 microflares,
  while we could not find such encounters around the footpoints of the
  other 27 microflares. Emerging magnetic fluxes in the moat were the
  dominant origin causing the encounters of opposite polarities (21 of
  28 events). Unipolar moving magnetic features (MMFs) with negative
  polarities the same as the sunspot definitely caused the encounters of
  opposite polarities for five microflares. The decrease of magnetic flux,
  i.e., magnetic flux cancellation, was confirmed at the encountering site
  in typical examples of microflares. Microflares were not isotropically
  distributed around the spot; the microflares with emerging magnetic
  fluxes (EMFs) were observed in the direction where magnetic islands
  with the same polarity as the spot were located at the outer boundary
  of the moat, while the microflares with negative MMFs were observed
  in the direction where magnetic islands with polarity opposite to the
  spot were located at the outer boundary of the moat. We also found that
  EMFs in the moat had a unique orientation in which those with the same
  polarity as the spot is closer to the spot than the other one that had
  the opposite polarity to the spot. These observational results lead
  to two magnetic configurations including magnetic reconnection for
  triggering energy release at least in half of the microflares around
  the spot, and suggest that the global magnetic structures around the
  spot strongly affect what kinds of polarity encounters are formed in
  the sunspot moat.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Quiescent Prominence Dynamics Observed with the Hinode Solar
    Optical Telescope. I. Turbulent Upflow Plumes
Authors: Berger, Thomas E.; Slater, Gregory; Hurlburt, Neal; Shine,
   Richard; Tarbell, Theodore; Title, Alan; Lites, Bruce W.; Okamoto,
   Takenori J.; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Magara, Tetsuya;
   Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2010ApJ...716.1288B    Altcode:
  Hinode/Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) observations reveal two new
  dynamic modes in quiescent solar prominences: large-scale (20-50 Mm)
  "arches" or "bubbles" that "inflate" from below into prominences, and
  smaller-scale (2-6 Mm) dark turbulent upflows. These novel dynamics are
  related in that they are always dark in visible-light spectral bands,
  they rise through the bright prominence emission with approximately
  constant speeds, and the small-scale upflows are sometimes observed to
  emanate from the top of the larger bubbles. Here we present detailed
  kinematic measurements of the small-scale turbulent upflows seen in
  several prominences in the SOT database. The dark upflows typically
  initiate vertically from 5 to 10 Mm wide dark cavities between the
  bottom of the prominence and the top of the chromospheric spicule
  layer. Small perturbations on the order of 1 Mm or less in size
  grow on the upper boundaries of cavities to generate plumes up to
  4-6 Mm across at their largest widths. All plumes develop highly
  turbulent profiles, including occasional Kelvin-Helmholtz vortex
  "roll-up" of the leading edge. The flows typically rise 10-15 Mm before
  decelerating to equilibrium. We measure the flowfield characteristics
  with a manual tracing method and with the Nonlinear Affine Velocity
  Estimator (NAVE) "optical flow" code to derive velocity, acceleration,
  lifetime, and height data for several representative plumes. Maximum
  initial speeds are in the range of 20-30 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, which
  is supersonic for a ~10,000 K plasma. The plumes decelerate in the
  final few Mm of their trajectories resulting in mean ascent speeds
  of 13-17 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. Typical lifetimes range from 300 to 1000
  s (~5-15 minutes). The area growth rate of the plumes (observed as
  two-dimensional objects in the plane of the sky) is initially linear
  and ranges from 20,000 to 30,000 km<SUP>2</SUP> s<SUP>-1</SUP> reaching
  maximum projected areas from 2 to 15 Mm<SUP>2</SUP>. Maximum contrast of
  the dark flows relative to the bright prominence plasma in SOT images
  is negative and ranges from -10% for smaller flows to -50% for larger
  flows. Passive scalar "cork movies" derived from NAVE measurements show
  that prominence plasma is entrained by the upflows, helping to counter
  the ubiquitous downflow streams in the prominence. Plume formation
  shows no clear temporal periodicity. However, it is common to find
  "active cavities" beneath prominences that can spawn many upflows in
  succession before going dormant. The mean flow recurrence time in these
  active locations is roughly 300-500 s (5-8 minutes). Locations remain
  active on timescales of tens of minutes up to several hours. Using a
  column density ratio measurement and reasonable assumptions on plume
  and prominence geometries, we estimate that the mass density in the
  dark cavities is at most 20% of the visible prominence density, implying
  that a single large plume could supply up to 1% of the mass of a typical
  quiescent prominence. We hypothesize that the plumes are generated from
  a Rayleigh-Taylor instability taking place on the boundary between
  the buoyant cavities and the overlying prominence. Characteristics,
  such as plume size and frequency, may be modulated by the strength
  and direction of the cavity magnetic field relative to the prominence
  magnetic field. We conclude that buoyant plumes are a source of
  quiescent prominence mass as well as a mechanism by which prominence
  plasma is advected upward, countering constant gravitational drainage.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Relationship Among Magnetic Field Configuration, Penumbral
    Size, and Evershed Flow Speed
Authors: Deng, Na; Shimizu, T.; Choudhary, D.
2010AAS...21640308D    Altcode: 2010BAAS...41..879D
  Recent observations (e.g., Wang et al. 2004; Deng et al. 2005) have
  shown that there is a sudden penumbral decay associated with major
  flares during which the overall magnetic field inclination in penumbra
  changes due to magnetic reconnection. We propose that the size (i.e.,
  length) of sunspot penumbra is related to the localized magnetic field
  configuration. In order to test this hypothesis, we study 11 sunspots
  close to disk center with different sizes, which were observed by
  Hinode/SOT at the late phase of solar cycle 23. We notice that even
  for typical alpha sunspots near the disc center, the penumbral length
  is different in different sectors in the same spot. Since the Evershed
  flow is coupled with penumbra, we also study the properties of Evershed
  flow, such as its speed, at different location of a sunspot. The SP
  data is used to study the magnetic field parameters (e.g., strength,
  inclination) in different penumbral sectors that show distinct penumbral
  length. The Evershed flow is measured both by Doppler shift from SP
  observation and by Local Correlation Tracking based on time series of
  BFI data. We aim to find the relationship among magnetic field topology,
  penumbral size, and Evershed flow speed.

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Title: Velocity and Magnetic Structure of Sunspot Umbral Dots
Authors: Prasad Choudhary, Debi; MacDonald, G. A.; Deng, N.;
   Shimizu, T.
2010AAS...21640111P    Altcode: 2010BAAS...41..858P
  The Doppler velocity measurements of umbral dots obtained with
  Spectropolarimeter (SP) on board Hinode Solar Optical Telescope is
  used to study the sunspot structure. The SP observations, each more
  than an hour long, were carried out at 2-minute cadence with 25 slit
  positions at penumbral boundary of a sunspot on 2-3 February 2007. These
  observations record the formation and decay of at least four umbral
  dots. The Doppler velocity observed in and around the umbral dots
  using Stokes profiles show unidirectional velocities of about 700 to
  1200 meters per second. The Stokes-V profiles at these locations show
  asymmetry of about 1 to 5 % compared to the surroundings. We discuss the
  formation mechanisms of umbral dots and their implication for sunspot
  structure using these observations. <P />This work is supported by
  NASA grant NNX08AQ32G and NSF grant ATM 05-48260.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: G-band and Hard X-ray Emissions of the 2006 December 14 Flare
    Observed by Hinode/SOT and Rhessi
Authors: Watanabe, Kyoko; Krucker, Säm; Hudson, Hugh; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Masuda, Satoshi; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi
2010ApJ...715..651W    Altcode: 2010arXiv1004.4259W
  We report on G-band emission observed by the Solar Optical Telescope on
  board the Hinode satellite in association with the X1.5-class flare on
  2006 December 14. The G-band enhancements originate from the footpoints
  of flaring coronal magnetic loops, coinciding with nonthermal hard
  X-ray bremsstrahlung sources observed by the Reuven Ramaty High Energy
  Solar Spectroscopic Imager. At the available 2 minute cadence, the
  G-band and hard X-ray intensities are furthermore well correlated in
  time. Assuming that the G-band enhancements are continuum emission from
  a blackbody, we derived the total radiative losses of the white-light
  flare (white-light power). If the G-band enhancements additionally have
  a contribution from lines, the derived values are overestimates. We
  compare the white-light power with the power in hard X-ray producing
  electrons using the thick-target assumption. Independent of the cutoff
  energy of the accelerated electron spectrum, the white-light power and
  the power of accelerated electrons are roughly proportional. Using
  the observed upper limit of ~30 keV for the cutoff energy, the hard
  X-ray producing electrons provide at least a factor of 2 more power
  than needed to produce the white-light emission. For electrons above
  40 keV, the powers roughly match for all four of the time intervals
  available during the impulsive phase. Hence, the flare-accelerated
  electrons contain enough energy to produce the white-light flare
  emissions. The observed correlation in time, space, and power strongly
  suggests that electron acceleration and white-light production in solar
  flares are closely related. However, the results also call attention
  to the inconsistency in apparent source heights of the hard X-ray
  (chromosphere) and white-light (upper photosphere) sources.

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Title: Tomographic All-sky Imaging Above 200 keV With BATSE
Authors: Wheaton, William A.; Case, G. L.; Cherry, M. L.; Ling, J. C.;
   Lo, M. W.; Roland, J. M.; Shimizu, T.
2010HEAD...11.3501W    Altcode: 2010BAAS...42..714W
  We describe a tomographic method of mapping the gamma-ray sky above 200
  keV with earth-occultation data from BATSE, the Burst And Transient
  Source Experiment on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (CGRO). The
  method combines good sensitivity with 0.5° angular resolution over
  the whole sky. Our previous occultation analysis of the BATSE data
  indicates the presence of a significant number of unmodeled cosmic
  sources. The Earth's horizon cuts the sky in a cycle that repeats with
  the 51 day precession of the CGRO orbit plane, which is reflected in
  periodic effects due to the uncatalogued sources. Such cycles are then a
  natural data unit for all-sky mapping by a tomographic method using the
  Radon transform. Because the airmass profile of the horizon is nearly
  independent of energy, we obtain 0.5° angular resolution over the
  entire low-energy gamma-ray region. To improve sensitivity, we subtract
  a phenomenological model for the non-cosmic gamma-ray background from
  the raw count data before performing the imaging analysis, which uses a
  simple planar approximation to the inverse Radon transform on a tiling
  of the sky. <P />We present images in four broad energy bands (23-98
  keV, 98-230 keV, 230-595 keV and 595-1800 keV) centered on selected
  sources to illustrate the power of this approach. Our preliminary
  results tentatively show several sources in the 230-595 keV and
  595-1800 keV bands, which will be presented. We easily image the Crab
  in the 595-1800 keV band in a single precession cycle. With 64 cycles
  in the 9 year CGRO data set, we expect a flux-complete survey of the
  entire sky, with multiple independent sky maps achieving a combined
  sensitivity typically less than 125 mCrab near 1 MeV. This work has
  been supported by grants from NASA, JPL, and LSU.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The SOLAR-C mission: study status update
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2010cosp...38.1950S    Altcode: 2010cosp.meet.1950S
  The SOLAR-C working group (WG) in ISAS/JAXA with Solar-C project
  office in NAOJ has been studying the next solar mission, the so-called
  Solar-C, as the post-Hinode mission. Two concepts have been studied:
  The Plan A mission will perform out-of-the-ecliptic magnetic and
  helioseismic observations of the polar and the quatorial regions
  to investigate properties of the polar region, meridional flow and
  magnetic structure inside the Sun down to the bottom of the convection
  zone. This kind of exploration may give better understanding of the
  mechanism responsible for creating the solar magnetic cycle. The Plan
  B mission will perform high spatial resolution, high throughput, high
  cadence spectroscopic and polarimetric and UV observations, from the
  photosphere to the corona, to investigate the magnetism of the Sun
  and its role in heating and dynamism of the solar atmospheres. Deeper
  investigations of magnetic reconnec-tion in the solar plasma is one
  of key observations for understanding dynamism and heating of the
  solar plasma, and it is our desire that the following observations
  are realized with the com-bination of the instrument candidates. 1)
  Precise spectroscopic and polarimetric observations for understanding
  dynamic nature of magnetic fields, especially in the upper atmospheres
  (chro-mosphere and, the corona if possible). 2) High time resolution,
  high throughput spectroscopic observations for understanding nature of
  dynamics. 3) Seamless observations over the entire atmosphere, i.e.,
  from photosphere to corona, for understanding the entire pictures
  of heating and dynamics. 4) High spatial resolution observations for
  resolving elementary structures and physical process responsible for
  various MHD behaviors in the solar atmosphere. Three model payloads have
  been studied: 1.5m near IR-visible-UV telescope, high throughput UV/EUV
  spectrograph, and X-ray telescope with photon counting mode. Studies
  are in good progress in 2009, with studies by sub-working groups,
  which are organized with participation of many scientists from US and
  countries in Europe. The WG plans to propose a single mission plan to
  ISAS/JAXA at the time of the next call for proposal of the next JAXA
  science mission. We will report our latest mission concept and study
  status in the presentation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetohydrodynamics Study of Three-Dimensional Fast Magnetic
    Reconnection for Intermittent Snake-Like Downflows in Solar Flares
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondo, K.; Ugai, M.; Shibata, K.
2009ApJ...707..420S    Altcode:
  Three-dimensional instability of the spontaneous fast magnetic
  reconnection is studied with magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)
  simulation, where the two-dimensional model of the spontaneous
  fast magnetic reconnection is destabilized in three dimensions. In
  two-dimensional models, every plasma condition is assumed to be
  uniform in the sheet current direction. In that case, it is well
  known that the two-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection can be
  caused by current-driven anomalous resistivity, when an initial
  resistive disturbance is locally put in a one-dimensional current
  sheet. In this paper, it is studied whether the two-dimensional fast
  magnetic reconnection can be destabilized or not when the initial
  resistive disturbance is three dimensional, i.e., that which has weak
  fluctuations in the sheet current direction. According to our study,
  the two-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection is developed to the
  three-dimensional intermittent fast magnetic reconnection which is
  strongly localized in the sheet current direction. The resulting fast
  magnetic reconnection repeats to randomly eject three-dimensional
  magnetic loops which are very similar to the intermittent downflows
  observed in solar flares. In fact, in some observations of solar flares,
  the current sheet seems to be approximately one dimensional, but the
  fast magnetic reconnection is strongly localized in the sheet current
  direction, i.e., fully three dimensional. In addition, the observed
  plasma downflows as snake-like curves. It is shown that those observed
  features are consistent with our numerical MHD study.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observation of the Vector Magnetic Fields in a Sunspot
    Light Bridge Accompanied by Chromospheric Plasma Ejections
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2009ASPC..415..148S    Altcode:
  This article briefly discusses vector magnetic fields of of a sunspot
  light bridge (LB) where chromospheric plasma ejections (or it is
  called surges) occurred intermittently and recurrently for more than 1
  day. Obliquely oriented magnetic fields with strong vertical electric
  current density higher than 100 mA/m<SUP>2</SUP> are clearly observed
  along the light bridge, suggesting a twisted magnetic flux (current
  carrying) loop lying along the bridge. The magnetic field structure of
  the light bridge is modeled to explain observed recurrent ejections
  in terms of magnetic reconnections at the low atmosphere. Details of
  our findings will be described in a more complete paper (Shimizu et
  al. 2009).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Radiation Transfer Analysis on Heating Mechanism of
    Magnetohydrodynamic Emerging Magnetic Flux Tube
Authors: Kato, Y.; Magara, T.; Shimizu, T.
2009ASPC..415..272K    Altcode:
  In spite of the large number of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations
  of emerging flux tubes in the solar atmosphere, radiation properties of
  the phenomenon remain poorly understood. This is because heating at the
  footpoints of the emerging magnetic field lines is significant and the
  effects associated with heat conduction and evaporation have largely
  been neglected. In this study, we have performed three-dimensional
  (3-D) multi-wavelength radiation transfer calculations on a MHD model
  of an emerging flux tube in order to examine the MHD model and also to
  identify a possible heating mechanism for explaining the properties of
  observed X-ray coronal loops. It is found that the current dissipation
  model is difficult for reproducing the structure of X-ray loops observed
  by Hinode XRT and Yohkoh SXT. This suggests that alternative models
  of the heating process should be incorporated into our MHD models. We
  left unresolved issues of the heating process as future work.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Initial Results of New Tomographic Imaging of the Gamma-Ray
    Sky with BATSE
Authors: Case, G. L.; Cherry, M. L.; Ling, J. C.; Lo, M.; Shimizu,
   T.; Wheaton, Wm. A.
2009arXiv0912.3815C    Altcode:
  We describe an improved method of mapping the gamma-ray sky by applying
  the Linear Radon Transform to data from BATSE on NASA's CGRO. Based
  on a method similar to that used in medical imaging, we use the
  relatively sharp (~0.25 deg) limb of the Earth to collimate BATSE's
  eight Large Area Detectors (LADs). Coupling this to the ~51-day
  precession cycle of the CGRO orbit, we can complete a full survey
  of the sky, localizing point sources to &lt; 1 deg accuracy. This
  technique also uses a physical model for removing many sources of
  gamma-ray background, which allows us to image strong gamma-ray sources
  such as the Crab up to ~2 MeV with only a single precession cycle. We
  present the concept of the Radon Transform technique as applied to
  the BATSE data for imaging the gamma-ray sky and show sample images
  in three broad energy bands (23-98 keV, 98-230 keV, and 230-595 keV)
  centered on the positions of selected sources from the catalog of 130
  known sources used in our Enhanced BATSE Occultation Package (EBOP)
  analysis system. Any new sources discovered during the sky survey will
  be added to the input catalog for EBOP allowing daily light curves and
  spectra to be generated. We also discuss the adaptation of tomographic
  imaging to the Fermi GBM occultation project.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Flux Budget in a Decaying Active Region
Authors: Kubo, M.; Lites, B. W.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.
2009ASPC..415..359K    Altcode:
  We investigate the sunspot decay process in terms of the magnetic flux
  budget of a decaying sunspot. This article is based on results in Kubo
  et al. 2008. Please see this paper for further details.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The self-organization of neutral lines in three-dimensional
    and random fast magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2009AGUFMSH23A1532S    Altcode:
  Three-dimensional, multiple, spontaneous, and intermittent fast
  magnetic reconnection was studied in numerical MHD simulations as a
  three-dimensional instability of the typical two-dimensional spontaneous
  fast magnetic reconnection model. In this model, the current-driven
  anomalous resistivity is assumed and the fast reconnection process
  is initiated by a three-dimensional resistive perturbation in the
  one-dimensional current sheet. The resulting fast reconnection process
  is strongly localized in the sheet current direction, intermittently
  enhanced, and simultaneously occurs in some places of the current
  sheet. As a result, magnetic loops, i.e. plasmoids, are repeatedly
  and randomly ejected. This numerical result is very similar to the
  intermittent downflows often observed in EUV imager of solar flares. In
  this paper, in the viewpoint of three-dimensional instability of the
  reconnection process, the three-dimensional structures and dynamics
  of neutral lines which can be caused in the one-dimensional current
  sheet are reported through the numerical and analytical MHD studies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evolution of fine magnetic structures in sunspot light bridges
    as observed with Hinode/SOT
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2009AGUFMSH53B..08S    Altcode:
  Sunspot light bridges are one of the fundamental magnetic structures
  in sunspots, possibly related to fragmentation of magnetic flux in
  sunspots. One of the interesting and important observational aspects
  that some light bridges show chromospheric activities along the
  structure, such as long-lasting plasma ejections or surge activities
  (Roy 1973, Asai et al. 2001, Bharti et al. 2007, Shimizu et al. 2009)
  and brightness enhancements (Berger and Berdyugina 2003). Moreover,
  X-ray transient brightenings of coronal loops (microflares) may
  have one loop footpoint near along sunspot light bridges. What are
  magnetic structures and activities for causing activities in the
  chromosphere and corona? Precise vector magnetic field measurements
  with high spatial resolution can give observational hints to this
  question. This presentation will discuss high-resolution vector
  magnetic field measurements of sunspot light bridges, some of which
  showed remarkable chromospheric activities. One good example is a
  sunspot light bridge observed at the south-east side of the leading
  sunspot in NOAA Active Region 10953. Long-lasting plasma ejections were
  intermittently and recurrently observed in the chromosphere for more
  than 1 days, starting from 20UT on April 29, 2007 and observed through
  April 30. The light bridge showed several number of brightenings in
  the chromosphere on May 1. During these three days, SOT successfully
  captured long-term evolution of fine magnetic structures in the light
  bridge with Stokes Polarimeter. The magnetic field data suggests that
  magnetic flux tubes were trapped below a cusp-shaped magnetic structure
  along the light bridge. The flux tubes were highly twisted on April
  30 and less twisted on May 1. Chromospheric ejections and heating,
  and their different behaviors between on April 30 and May 1 may be
  explained with evolution of fine magnetic structures along the light
  bridge. Many observational features can be well explained in terms of
  magnetic reconnections between the trapped flux tubes and pre-existing
  vertically oriented umbral fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Mission Status
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2009ASPC..415....1S    Altcode:
  The Hinode mission status was briefly explained in this
  presentation. The Hinode spacecraft has been operated for two
  years after the launch on 23 September 2006 (JST). All the three
  telescopes are continuing to observe the Sun with the expected
  excellent performance. The Sun has been quiet for most of the latest
  one year and Hinode's observations were mainly focused on the quiet Sun
  studies. Spacecraft functions are good except for an anomaly in X-band
  telemetry downlink. The X-band downlink anomaly gives a restriction to
  the volume of science data but we have almost established scientific
  operations baseline since the transition to S-band backup high-speed
  downlink.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Flux Budget of a Decaying Sunspot
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Lites, Bruce W.; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi
2009shin.confE...9K    Altcode:
  Numerous small magnetic elements called moving magnetic features (MMFs)
  are generally observed in the moat region that surrounds a sunspot. We
  attempt to address a basic question how much magnetic flux is carried
  away from a sunspot by MMFs and is subsequently removed from the
  photosphere. This is essential for understanding decay of sunspots
  and distribution of magnetic flux on the Sun. We estimate the magnetic
  flux budget in a decaying sunspot and its surrounding moat region by
  using a time series of the spatial distribution of vector magnetic
  fields in the photosphere. Spectropolarimetric measurements with the
  Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite allow us, for
  the first time, to know an accurate flux change without any effects
  of atmospheric seeing. The amount of magnetic flux that decreases
  in the sunspot and (inner) moat region is very similar to magnetic
  flux transported to the outer boundary of the moat region. The flux
  loss rates of magnetic elements with positive and negative polarities
  balance each other around the outer boundary of the moat region. These
  results suggest that most of the magnetic flux in the sunspot is
  transported to the outer boundary of the moat region as MMFs, and
  then the transported flux is removed from the photosphere by apparent
  collisions of opposite-polarity magnetic elements (called

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic field strength of active region filaments
Authors: Kuckein, C.; Centeno, R.; Martínez Pillet, V.; Casini, R.;
   Manso Sainz, R.; Shimizu, T.
2009A&A...501.1113K    Altcode: 2009arXiv0904.4876K
  Aims: We study the vector magnetic field of a filament observed over a
  compact active region neutral line. <BR />Methods: Spectropolarimetric
  data acquired with TIP-II (VTT, Tenerife, Spain) of the 10 830
  Å spectral region provide full Stokes vectors that were analyzed
  using three different methods: magnetograph analysis, Milne-Eddington
  inversions, and PCA-based atomic polarization inversions. <BR />Results:
  The inferred magnetic field strengths in the filament are around 600-700
  G by all these three methods. Longitudinal fields are found in the
  range of 100-200 G whereas the transverse components become dominant,
  with fields as high as 500-600 G. We find strong transverse fields
  near the neutral line also at photospheric levels. <BR />Conclusions:
  Our analysis indicates that strong (higher than 500 G, but below kG)
  transverse magnetic fields are present in active region filaments. This
  corresponds to the highest field strengths reliably measured in these
  structures. The profiles of the helium 10 830 Å lines observed in
  this active region filament are dominated by the Zeeman effect.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A New View of Fine Scale Dynamics and Magnetism of Sunspots
    Revealed by Hinode/SOT
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Shimojo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Tarbell, T. D.; Berger, T.;
   Title, A. M.; Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Yokoyama, T.; Nagata, S.
2009ASPC..405..167I    Altcode:
  The Solar Optical Telescope on-board Hinode is providing a new view of
  the fine scale dynamics in sunspots with its high spatial resolution and
  unprecedented image stability. We present three features related to the
  Evershed flow each of which raises a new puzzle in sunspot dynamics;
  i.e., twisting appearance of penumbral filaments, the source and sink
  of individual Evershed flow channels, and the net circular polarization
  in penumbrae with its spatial relation to the Evershed flow channels.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Has Hinode Revealed the Missing Turbulent Flux of the
    Quiet Sun?
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Berger, T.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A. M.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.
2009ASPC..405..173L    Altcode:
  The Hinode Spectro-Polarimeter has revealed the presence of surprisingly
  strong horizontal magnetic fields nearly everywhere in the quiet
  solar atmosphere. These horizontal fields, along with measures of the
  vertical fields, may be the signature of the “hidden turbulent flux”
  of the quiet Sun. The measured horizontal fields average at least to
  55 Gauss: nearly 5 times that of the measured longitudinal apparent
  flux density. The nature of these fields are reviewed, and discussed
  in the light of recent magneto-convection numerical simulations of
  the quiet Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observation of the Magnetic Fields in a Sunspot Light
    Bridge Accompanied by Long-Lasting Chromospheric Plasma Ejections
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Lites,
   Bruce W.; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shine, Richard A.; Tarbell, Theodore D.
2009ApJ...696L..66S    Altcode:
  We present high-resolution magnetic field measurements of a sunspot
  light bridge (LB) that produced chromospheric plasma ejections
  intermittently and recurrently for more than 1 day. The observations
  were carried out with the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope on 2007
  April 29 and 30. The spectro-polarimeter reveals obliquely oriented
  magnetic fields with vertical electric current density higher than
  100 mA m<SUP>-2</SUP> along the LB. The observations suggest that
  current-carrying highly twisted magnetic flux tubes are trapped below
  a cusp-shaped magnetic structure along the LB. The presence of trapped
  current-carrying flux tubes is essential for causing long-lasting
  chromospheric plasma ejections at the interface with pre-existing
  vertically oriented umbral fields. A bidirectional jet was clearly
  detected, suggesting magnetic reconnections occurring at very low
  altitudes, slightly above the height where the vector magnetic fields
  are measured. Moreover, we found another strong vertical electric
  current on the interface between the current-carrying flux tube
  and pre-existing umbral field, which might be a direct detection
  of the currents flowing in the current sheet formed at the magnetic
  reconnection sites.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional non-linear instability of spontaneous fast
    magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.
2009EP&S...61..569S    Altcode: 2009EP&S...61L.569S
  Three-dimensional instability of spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection
  is studied using MHD (magnetohydro- dynamic) simulation. Previous
  two-dimensional MHD studies have demonstrated that, if a current-driven
  anomalous resistivity is assumed, two-dimensional fast magnetic
  reconnection occurs and two-dimensional largescale magnetic loops,
  i.e., plasmoids, are ejected from the reconnection region. In most
  two-dimensional MHD studies, the structure of the current sheet is
  initially one-dimensinal. On the other hand, in recent space plasma
  observations, fully three-dimensional magnetic loops frequently appear
  even in the almost one-dimensional current sheet. This suggests that the
  classical two-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection may be unstable to
  any three-dimensional perturbation, resulting in three-dimensional fast
  magnetic reconnection. In this paper, we show that a three-dimensional
  resistive perturbation destabilizes two-dimensional fast magnetic
  reconnection and results in three-dimensional fast magnetic
  reconnection. The resulting three-dimensional fast reconnection
  repeatedly ejects three-dimensional magnetic loops downstream. The
  obtained numerical results are similar to the pulsating downflows
  observed in solar flares. According to the Fourier analysis of the
  ejected magnetic loops, the time evolution of this three-dimensional
  instability is fully non-linear.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Flux Budget of a Decaying Sunspot
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Lites, B. W.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.
2009SPD....40.0905K    Altcode:
  We estimate how much magnetic flux is lost in a decaying sunspot
  and how much magnetic flux is carried away from the sunspot through
  its surrounding moat region. A time series of spectropolarimetric
  measurements with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode allows us,
  for the first time, to investigate an accurate flux change without
  any effects of atmospheric seeing. The amount of magnetic flux that
  decreases in the sunspot and moat region is almost equal to that of
  magnetic flux transported to the outer boundary of the moat region. The
  flux loss rates of magnetic elements with positive and negative
  polarities are balanced each other around the outer boundary of the
  moat region. These results suggest that most of the magnetic flux in
  the sunspot is transported to the outer boundary of the moat region
  as moving magnetic features, and then removed from the photosphere by
  flux cancellation around the moat boundary.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: BATSE Soft Gamma Rays Tomographic Sky Imaging with Radon
    Transforms
Authors: Ling, J. C.; Case, G. L., II; Lo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Reddick,
   R.; Wheaton, W. A.; Cherry, M.
2009AAS...21440712L    Altcode:
  We present preliminary results of tomographic imaging of the 20 keV
  to 1800 keV gamma-ray sky using Radon Transforms and data from the
  BATSE experiment on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. The method uses
  Earth occultation, with the 0.2 degree angular response characteristic
  of the atmospheric limb, together with the all-sky coverage of the
  BATSE instrument to produce 2-dimensional maps of the sky from the
  count data from the eight BATSE detectors. We have initially used
  the Linear Radon Transform (LRT), though this limits us to imaging
  small ( 4x4<SUP>o</SUP>) regions of the sky where the earth limb can
  be approximated as a straight line. As the orbit of the spacecraft
  precesses over a 51-day period, the earth limb sweeps across the sky at
  different orientations, though never sampling the full 180<SUP>o</SUP>
  range of angles. The large and complex variation of the background
  counting rate common to all high-energy instruments in low-earth
  orbit is subtracted from the raw data prior to the imaging steps
  using our earlier work in modeling the background variability (Ling
  et al. 2000). <P />Summing the 16 BATSE LAD energy channels into four
  broad bands (23-98 keV, 98-230 keV, 230-595 keV, and 595-1798 keV),
  we are able to detect and position the Crab Nebula and the nearby
  transient GRO J0422+32 using only a single 51 day precession cycle,
  with source location accuracy of the order of 1<SUP>o</SUP> in each
  band. We confirm earlier work by Zhang et al (1993) for applying
  the LRT technique to the BATSE data, extend their work to cover more
  source regions, and produce images at higher energies. We also discuss
  the extension of our method to Generalized Radon Transforms, e.g. the
  Spherical Cap Radon Transform, which would allow us to image larger
  regions of the sky.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Precision Co-alignment Of Hinode SOT And XRT Images
Authors: Slater, Gregory L.; Shimizu, T.
2009SPD....40.1521S    Altcode:
  In order to fully exploit the high spatial resolution of the
  SOT and XRT telescopes of the Hinode solar observatory, routine
  sub-arcsecond alignment between images from the two instruments
  is important. Algorithms have been developed to precisely align
  SOT and XRT image series to within 1 arcsec. The effectiveness of
  the algorithms is currently being tested on data taken throughout the
  Hinode mission. The results of these tests will be presented, as well
  as the status of efforts to generate absolute pointing coordinates
  for SOT and XRT images.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling of substorms and flares by the fast reconnection
    mechanism
Authors: Ugai, M.; Kondoh, K.; Shimizu, T.
2009EP&S...61..561U    Altcode: 2009EP&S...61L.561U
  The 3D spontaneous fast reconnection model is applied to well-known
  signatures of geomagnetic substorms and solar flares. First, it
  is applied to the traveling compression regions (TCRs) associated
  with plasmoids propagating down the tail plasma sheet, known as
  a definite signature of geomagnetic substorms, and the in-situ
  satellite observations can be precisely explained, both qualitatively
  and quantitatively. Then, it is demonstrated that the magnetospheric
  current wedge drastically evolves through field-aligned currents to
  link the tail current to the auroral electrojet. It is also found
  that the well-known morphological features of two-ribbon flares
  can be explained by the fast reconnection model. In particular, the
  joule heating, associated with the flare current wedge, is shown to
  be important for the two-ribbon heating. Therefore, it is suggested
  that both solar flares and geomagnetic substorms result from the same
  physical mechanism, i.e., the fast reconnection mechanism.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Prominence Formation Associated with an Emerging Helical
    Flux Rope
Authors: Okamoto, Takenori J.; Tsuneta, Saku; Lites, Bruce W.; Kubo,
   Masahito; Yokoyama, Takaaki; Berger, Thomas E.; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shibata, Kazunari; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore
   D.; Title, Alan M.
2009ApJ...697..913O    Altcode: 2009arXiv0904.0007O
  The formation and evolution process and magnetic configuration of
  solar prominences remain unclear. In order to study the formation
  process of prominences, we examine continuous observations of a
  prominence in NOAA AR 10953 with the Solar Optical Telescope on
  the Hinode satellite. As reported in our previous Letter, we find
  a signature suggesting that a helical flux rope emerges from below
  the photosphere under a pre-existing prominence. Here we investigate
  more detailed properties and photospheric indications of the emerging
  helical flux rope, and discuss their relationship to the formation of
  the prominence. Our main conclusions are: (1) a dark region with absence
  of strong vertical magnetic fields broadens and then narrows in Ca II
  H-line filtergrams. This phenomenon is consistent with the emergence
  of the helical flux rope as photospheric counterparts. The size of the
  flux rope is roughly 30,000 km long and 10,000 km wide. The width is
  larger than that of the prominence. (2) No shear motion or converging
  flows are detected, but we find diverging flows such as mesogranules
  along the polarity inversion line. The presence of mesogranules may
  be related to the emergence of the helical flux rope. (3) The emerging
  helical flux rope reconnects with magnetic fields of the pre-existing
  prominence to stabilize the prominence for the next several days. We
  thus conjecture that prominence coronal magnetic fields emerge in
  the form of helical flux ropes that contribute to the formation and
  maintenance of the prominence.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: HINODE: New Space-borne Observatory for Investigating the Sun
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2009TrSpT...7..Tm1S    Altcode:
  This paper gives an overview of the Hinode satellite, which was
  launched in September 2006 and is now observing the Sun with high
  spatial resolution and high performance never achieved so far. The
  primary aims of Hinode are to investigate magnetic activity of the Sun
  including its generation, energy transfer and release of the magnetic
  energy by simultaneously observing the solar surface (photosphere) and
  the corona. Some results from the Hinode observations are presented
  with emphasis on the supreme performance of the spacecraft and its
  onboard telescopes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Erratum: "Magnetic Flux Loss and Flux Transport in a Decaying
    Active Region" (ApJ, 686, 1447 [2008])
Authors: Kubo, M.; Lites, B. W.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.
2008ApJ...689.1456K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Magnetic Landscape of the Sun's Polar Region
Authors: Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Lites, B. W.;
   Matsuzaki, K.; Nagata, S.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Shimizu, T.; Shimojo,
   M.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu, Y.; Suzuki, T. K.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title,
   A. M.
2008ApJ...688.1374T    Altcode: 2008arXiv0807.4631T
  We present observations of the magnetic landscape of the polar region
  of the Sun that are unprecedented in terms of spatial resolution,
  field of view, and polarimetric precision. They were carried out with
  the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode. Using a Milne-Eddington
  inversion, we find many vertically oriented magnetic flux tubes
  with field strengths as strong as 1 kG scattered in latitude between
  70° and 90°. They all have the same polarity, consistent with the
  global polarity of the polar region. The field vectors are observed to
  diverge from the centers of the flux elements, consistent with a view
  of magnetic fields that are expanding and fanning out with height. The
  polar region is also found to have ubiquitous horizontal fields. The
  polar regions are the source of the fast solar wind, which is channeled
  along unipolar coronal magnetic fields whose photospheric source is
  evidently rooted in the strong-field, vertical patches of flux. We
  conjecture that vertical flux tubes with large expansion around the
  photospheric-coronal boundary serve as efficient chimneys for Alfvén
  waves that accelerate the solar wind.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional instability of spontaneous fast magnetic
    reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondo, K.; Ugai, M.
2008AGUFMSM21B..06S    Altcode:
  MHD numerical study for spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection is
  presented. As well-known in two- dimensional numerical MHD studies,
  if a current-driven anomalous resistivity is assumed, one-dimensional
  current sheet is destabilized by a resistive perturbation, resulting in
  two-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection. In this paper, it is shown
  that such a two-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection process can be
  moreover destabilized by a three-dimensional resistive perturbation,
  resulting in three-dimensional fast magnetic reconnection which is
  strongly localized in sheet current direction. The three-dimensional
  fast magnetic reconnection process intermittently and randomly ejects
  three-dimensional plasmoids downstream. This numerical study is
  applicable for magnetic reconnection problems in geo-magnetotail and
  solar flares, in which three-dimensional plasmoids are intermittently
  ejected from one-dimensional current sheet. It fact, this numerical
  result is very similar to the intermittent downflow observed in solar
  flares by TRACE"fs EUV instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The SOLAR-C mission
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2008AGUFMSH52A..07S    Altcode:
  Solar-physics community in Japan has so far developed 3 solar missions,
  i.e., Hinotori, Yohkoh, and Hinode, over past 25 years. Japan has
  started the conceptual studies for realizing the forth mission (SOLAR-C)
  in the coming decade. Two mission concepts are now under study. Plan
  A is to perform magnetic, helioseismic, and X-ray observations of
  the solar polar regions from out of the ecliptic to investigate
  properties of the polar region, magnetic and flow structures inside
  the Sun down to the bottom of the convection zone. Plan B is to perform
  high throughput, high cadence spectroscopic/polarimetric and EUV/X-ray
  observations with high spatial resolution, focusing on chromosphere and
  transition region as interface layer from the photosphere to corona, to
  investigate magnetism of the Sun and its roles in heating and dynamics
  of solar atmosphere. JAXA SOLAR-C working group, organized in ISAS of
  JAXA with participation of japanese researchers, refines both plans,
  compare science, technology, and other constraints, and will prioritize
  the two plans. We recognize that success of Hinode and Yohkoh is due
  to strong international collaborations. The working group hopes strong
  international support for realizing the SOLAR-C mission and invites
  US and European participation to the SOLAR-C program, following our
  remarkable history of collaboration. International SOLAR-C science
  definition meeting will be held this November at ISAS with participants
  from US and European countries. This presentation will report on the
  mission concept and current study status, including discussions in
  the international Solar-C science definition meeting.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: White Light Flare Observations from the Solar Optical Telescope
    onboard Hinode
Authors: Watanabe, K.; Shimizu, T.
2008AGUFMSH41B1620W    Altcode:
  In association with solar flares, we sometimes observe emission of white
  light continuum, which is referred to as a "gwhite light flare"h. White
  light flares are very infrequent, and the processes causing them are
  still unclear. Since close correlations of white light and hard X-ray
  emission were reported in many events (e.g. Hudson et al., 2006),
  the mechanism seems to involve emission of white light by nonthermal
  electron beams. The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) is capable making
  observations in white light. We used SOT G-band observations to search
  for white-light flare counterparts to flares of GOES X-ray class C and
  higher. Among 155 solar flares over the first two years of the Hinode
  mission, we found eight white-light flare events. The white-light
  events tended to occur in larger events, however two occurred in
  C-class flares. The white light emission was located inside the
  flare ribbon emission, where the ribbons were observed in SOT Ca II
  H images. The amount of white-light emission is correlated with the
  emission in GOES soft X-rays and RHESSI hard X-rays. The location of
  the white light emission is located at almost the same place as the
  hard X-ray emission. However, just a weak correlation was seen between
  white light emission and magnetic field strength observed by the SOT
  Spectro Polarimeter. We consider these observations in terms of hard
  X-ray production and particle acceleration scenarios.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Flux Loss and Flux Transport in a Decaying Active
    Region
Authors: Kubo, M.; Lites, B. W.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.
2008ApJ...686.1447K    Altcode: 2008arXiv0807.4340K
  We estimate the temporal change of magnetic flux normal to the solar
  surface in a decaying active region by using a time series of the
  spatial distribution of vector magnetic fields in the photosphere. The
  vector magnetic fields are derived from full spectropolarimetric
  measurements with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode. We compare
  a magnetic flux loss rate to a flux transport rate in a decaying sunspot
  and its surrounding moat region. The amount of magnetic flux that
  decreases in the sunspot and moat region is very similar to magnetic
  flux transported to the outer boundary of the moat region. The flux
  loss rates [(dF/dt)<SUB>loss</SUB>] of magnetic elements with positive
  and negative polarities balance each other around the outer boundary of
  the moat region. These results suggest that most of the magnetic flux
  in the sunspot is transported to the outer boundary of the moat region
  as moving magnetic features, and then removed from the photosphere by
  flux cancellation around the outer boundary of the moat region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Fields of the Quiet Sun: A New Quantitative
    Perspective From Hinode
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Berger, T.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.
2008ASPC..397...17L    Altcode:
  This article summarizes results of studies presented in two papers
  already published: Lites et al. (2007a); Lites et al. (2007b). Please
  see these for further details.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On-orbit Performance of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard
    Hinode
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Tarbell, T.; Shine, R. A.;
   Hoffmann, C.; Berger, T.; Cruz, T.; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Shimizu,
   T.; Lites, B. W.
2008ASPC..397....5I    Altcode: 2008arXiv0804.3248I
  On-orbit performance of the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard Hinode
  is described with some attention to its unpredicted aspects. In general,
  SOT reveals an excellent performance and has been providing outstanding
  data. Some unexpected features exist, however, in behaviours of the
  focus position, throughput and structural stability. Most of them are
  recovered by the daily operation i.e., frequent focus adjustment,
  careful heater setting and corrections in data analysis. The
  tunable filter contains air bubbles which degrade the data quality
  significantly. Schemes for tuning the filter without disturbing the
  bubbles have been developed and tested, and some useful procedures
  to obtain Dopplergrams and magnetograms are now available. October
  and March, when the orbit of satellite becomes nearly perpendicular
  to the direction towards the Sun, provide a favourable condition for
  continuous runs of the narrow-band filter imager.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Observations of Spicules with Hinode/SOT
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.;
   Okamoto, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T.; Shine, R. A.
2008ASPC..397...27S    Altcode:
  High time cadence unprecedented images at the limb with Ca II H line
  filtergraph from the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard Hinode
  have revealed that a spicule consists of highly dynamic multi-threads
  (typically twin) as thin as a few tenths of an arcsecond, and shows
  prominent lateral movement or oscillation with rotation on its axis
  during its life. This multi-thread structure and lateral motion indicate
  that the spicules can be driven by magnetic reconnection at unresolved
  spatial scales at their footpoints.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evolution of Magnetic Fields at the Boundary of the Penumbra
Authors: Kubo, M.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Lites, B. W.; Tsuneta,
   S.; Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata, S.; Tarbell, T.; Shine,
   R. A.; Title, A. M.
2008ASPC..397...79K    Altcode:
  The formation of moving magnetic features (MMFs) separating from the
  penumbra were successfully observed with the Solar Optical Telescope
  (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite. We find that bright features in
  the outer penumbra are located at the penumbral spines, which have
  magnetic fields more vertical than the surroundings, or located at the
  MMFs separating from the spines. This suggests that convection in the
  outer penumbra is related to the disintegration of the sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Erratum: The Analysis of Penumbral Fine Structure Using an
    Advanced Inversion Technique
Authors: Jurcák, Jan; Bellot Rubio, Luis; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Tsuneta,
   Saku
2008PASJ...60..933J    Altcode:
  In the article [PASJ 59, S601-S606 (2007)], the word ”CSIC” was
  omitted from the affiliation of Dr. Luis Bellot Rubio. The correct
  affiliation is : <SUP>2</SUP>Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía
  (CSIC), Apdo. de Correos 3004, 18080 Granada, Spain

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vertical Temperature Structures of the Solar Corona Derived
    with the Hinode X-Ray Telescope
Authors: Kano, Ryouhei; Sakao, Taro; Narukage, Noriyuki; Tsuneta,
   Saku; Kotoku, Jun'ichi; Bando, Takamasa; Deluca, Edward; Lundquist,
   Loraine; Golub, Leon; Hara, Hirohisa; Matsuzaki, Keiichi; Shimojo,
   Masumi; Shibasaki, Kiyoto; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Nakatani, Ichiro
2008PASJ...60..827K    Altcode:
  We obtained temperature structures in faint coronal features
  above and near the solar limb with the X-Ray Telescope aboard the
  Hinode satellite by accurately correcting the scattered X-rays
  from surrounding bright regions with occulted images during
  the solar eclipses. Our analysis yields a polar coronal hole
  temperature of about 1.0MK and an emission measure in the range of
  10<SUP>25.5</SUP>-10<SUP>26.0</SUP>cm<SUP>-5</SUP>. In addition,
  our methods allow us to measure the temperature and emission
  measure of two distinct quiet-Sun structures: radial (plume-like)
  structures near the boundary of the coronal-hole and diffuse quiet
  Sun regions at mid-latitudes. The radial structures appear to have
  increasing temperature with height during the first 100Mm, and
  constant temperatures above 100Mm. For the diffuse quiet-Sun region
  the temperatures are the highest just above the limb, and appear
  to decrease with height. These differences may be due to different
  magnetic configurations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Frequent Occurrence of High-Speed Local Mass Downflows on
    the Solar Surface
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2008AstHe.101..414S    Altcode:
  New spectro-polarimetric measurements have been carried out with the
  Solar Optical Telescope onboard the Hinode satellite, revealing the
  frequent appearance of polarization signals indicating high-speed,
  probably supersonic, downflows that are associated with at least
  three different configurations of magnetic fields in the solar
  photosphere. The excitation of supersonic mass flows are one of the
  key observational features of the dynamical evolution occurring in
  magnetic-field fine structures on the solar surface. Furthermore,
  understanding the origins of observed supersonic flows may help to
  understand complicated interactions between plasma flows and magnetic
  fields in the astrophysical plasma.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Disintegration of Magnetic Flux in Decaying Sunspots as
    Observed with the Hinode SOT
Authors: Kubo, M.; Lites, B. W.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Shine, R. A.; Title, A. M.; Nagata,
   S.; Tsuneta, S.
2008ApJ...681.1677K    Altcode: 2008arXiv0806.0415K
  Continuous observations of sunspot penumbrae with the Solar Optical
  Telescope aboard Hinode clearly show that the outer boundary of the
  penumbra fluctuates around its averaged position. The penumbral outer
  boundary moves inward when granules appear in the outer penumbra. We
  discover that such granules appear one after another while moving
  magnetic features (MMFs) are separating from the penumbral "spines"
  (penumbral features that have fields that are stronger and more vertical
  than those of their surroundings). These granules that appear in the
  outer penumbra often merge with bright features inside the penumbra
  that move with the spines as they elongate toward the moat region. This
  suggests that convective motions around the penumbral outer boundary are
  related to the disintegration of magnetic flux in the sunspot. We also
  find that dark penumbral filaments frequently elongate into the moat
  region in the vicinity of MMFs that detach from penumbral spines. Such
  elongating dark penumbral filaments correspond to nearly horizontal
  fields extending from the penumbra. Pairs of MMFs with positive and
  negative polarities are sometimes observed along the elongating dark
  penumbral filaments. This strongly supports the notion that such
  elongating dark penumbral filaments have magnetic fields with a "sea
  serpent"-like structure. Evershed flows, which are associated with the
  penumbral horizontal fields, may be related to the detachment of the
  MMFs from the penumbral spines, as well as to the formation of the MMFs
  along the dark penumbral filaments that elongate into the moat region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Polarization Calibration of the Solar Optical Telescope
    onboard Hinode
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Lites, B.; Elmore, D.; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta,
   S.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.;
   Kiyohara, J.; Shinoda, K.; Card, G.; Lecinski, A.; Streander, K.;
   Nakagiri, M.; Miyashita, M.; Noguchi, M.; Hoffmann, C.; Cruz, T.
2008SoPh..249..233I    Altcode: 2008SoPh..tmp...69I
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) onboard Hinode aims to obtain vector
  magnetic fields on the Sun through precise spectropolarimetry of
  solar spectral lines with a spatial resolution of 0.2 - 0.3 arcsec. A
  photometric accuracy of 10<SUP>−3</SUP> is achieved and, after the
  polarization calibration, any artificial polarization from crosstalk
  among Stokes parameters is required to be suppressed below the level
  of the statistical noise over the SOT's field of view. This goal was
  achieved by the highly optimized design of the SOT as a polarimeter,
  extensive analyses and testing of optical elements, and an end-to-end
  calibration test of the entire system. In this paper we review both
  the approach adopted to realize the high-precision polarimeter of the
  SOT and its final polarization characteristics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Image Stabilization System for Hinode (Solar-B) Solar Optical
    Telescope
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.; Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T.; Edwards,
   C.; Shine, R.; Hoffmann, C.; Thomas, E.; Sour, S.; Rehse, R.; Ito,
   O.; Kashiwagi, Y.; Tabata, M.; Kodeki, K.; Nagase, M.; Matsuzaki,
   K.; Kobayashi, K.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.
2008SoPh..249..221S    Altcode:
  The Hinode Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) is the first space-borne
  visible-light telescope that enables us to observe magnetic-field
  dynamics in the solar lower atmosphere with 0.2 - 0.3 arcsec spatial
  resolution under extremely stable (seeing-free) conditions. To achieve
  precise measurements of the polarization with diffraction-limited
  images, stable pointing of the telescope (&lt;0.09 arcsec, 3σ) is
  required for solar images exposed on the focal plane CCD detectors. SOT
  has an image stabilization system that uses image displacements
  calculated from correlation tracking of solar granules to control
  a piezo-driven tip-tilt mirror. The system minimizes the motions
  of images for frequencies lower than 14 Hz while the satellite and
  telescope structural design damps microvibration in higher frequency
  ranges. It has been confirmed from the data taken on orbit that
  the remaining jitter is less than 0.03 arcsec (3σ) on the Sun. This
  excellent performance makes a major contribution to successful precise
  polarimetric measurements with 0.2 - 0.3 arcsec resolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Optical Telescope for the Hinode Mission: An Overview
Authors: Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata, S.; Otsubo,
   M.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu, Y.; Nakagiri, M.; Noguchi, M.; Tarbell,
   T.; Title, A.; Shine, R.; Rosenberg, W.; Hoffmann, C.; Jurcevich,
   B.; Kushner, G.; Levay, M.; Lites, B.; Elmore, D.; Matsushita, T.;
   Kawaguchi, N.; Saito, H.; Mikami, I.; Hill, L. D.; Owens, J. K.
2008SoPh..249..167T    Altcode: 2008SoPh..tmp...74T; 2007arXiv0711.1715T
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite
  (formerly called Solar-B) consists of the Optical Telescope Assembly
  (OTA) and the Focal Plane Package (FPP). The OTA is a 50-cm
  diffraction-limited Gregorian telescope, and the FPP includes the
  narrowband filtergraph (NFI) and the broadband filtergraph (BFI), plus
  the Stokes Spectro-Polarimeter (SP). The SOT provides unprecedented
  high-resolution photometric and vector magnetic images of the
  photosphere and chromosphere with a very stable point spread function
  and is equipped with an image-stabilization system with performance
  better than 0.01 arcsec rms. Together with the other two instruments
  on Hinode (the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) and the EUV Imaging Spectrometer
  (EIS)), the SOT is poised to address many fundamental questions about
  solar magnetohydrodynamics. This paper provides an overview; the
  details of the instrument are presented in a series of companion papers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Frequent Occurrence of High-Speed Local Mass Downflows on
    the Solar Surface
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Lites, B. W.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Nagata, S.; Kubo, M.; Shine, R. A.; Tarbell,
   T. D.
2008ApJ...680.1467S    Altcode: 2008arXiv0804.1167S
  We report on new spectropolarimetric measurements with simultaneous
  filter imaging observation, revealing the frequent appearance of
  polarization signals indicating high-speed, probably supersonic,
  downflows that are associated with at least three different
  configurations of magnetic fields in the solar photosphere. The
  observations were carried out with the Solar Optical Telescope on
  board the Hinode satellite. High-speed downflows are excited when a
  moving magnetic feature is newly formed near the penumbral boundary of
  sunspots. Also, a new type of downflows is identified at the edge of
  sunspot umbra that lack accompanying penumbral structures. These may
  be triggered by the interaction of magnetic fields swept by convection
  with well-concentrated magnetic flux. Another class of high-speed
  downflows are observed in quiet Sun and sunspot moat regions. These are
  closely related to the formation of small concentrated magnetic flux
  patches. High-speed downflows of all types are transient time-dependent
  mass motions. These findings suggest that the excitation of supersonic
  mass flows are one of the key observational features of the dynamical
  evolution occurring in magnetic-field fine structures on the solar
  surface.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cooperative Observation of Ellerman Bombs between the Solar
    Optical Telescope aboard Hinode and Hida/Domeless Solar Telescope
Authors: Matsumoto, Takuma; Kitai, Reizaburo; Shibata, Kazunari;
   Nagata, Shin'ichi; Otsuji, Kenichi; Nakamura, Tahei; Watanabe, Hiroko;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Lites, Bruce W.;
   Shine, Richard A.; Title, Alan M.
2008PASJ...60..577M    Altcode:
  High-resolution CaIIH broad-band filter images of NOAA10933 on 2007
  January 5 were obtained by the Solar Optical Telescope aboard the Hinode
  satellite. Many small-scale (∼1") bright points were observed outside
  the sunspot and inside the emerging flux region. We identified some of
  these bright points with Ellerman bombs (EBs) by using Hα images taken
  by the Domeless Solar Telescope at Hida observatory. The sub-arcsec
  structures of two EBs seen in CaIIH were studied in detail. Our
  observation showed the following two aspects: (1) The CaIIH bright
  points identified with EBs were associated with the bipolar magnetic
  field structures, as reported by previous studies. (2)The structure
  of the CaIIH bright points turned out to consist of the following two
  parts: a central elongated bright core (0.7" × 0.5") located along
  the magnetic neutral line and a diffuse halo (1.2"×1.8").

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Optical Telescope of Solar-B ( Hinode): The Optical
    Telescope Assembly
Authors: Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Otsubo,
   M.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nakagiri, M.; Noguchi, M.; Tamura, T.; Kato, Y.;
   Hara, H.; Kubo, M.; Mikami, I.; Saito, H.; Matsushita, T.; Kawaguchi,
   N.; Nakaoji, T.; Nagae, K.; Shimada, S.; Takeyama, N.; Yamamuro, T.
2008SoPh..249..197S    Altcode: 2008SoPh..tmp...26S
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Solar-B satellite (Hinode)
  is designed to perform high-precision photometric and polarimetric
  observations of the Sun in visible light spectra (388 - 668 nm)
  with a spatial resolution of 0.2 - 0.3 arcsec. The SOT consists of
  two optically separable components: the Optical Telescope Assembly
  (OTA), consisting of a 50-cm aperture Gregorian with a collimating lens
  unit and an active tip-tilt mirror, and an accompanying Focal Plane
  Package (FPP), housing two filtergraphs and a spectro-polarimeter. The
  optomechanical and optothermal performance of the OTA is crucial to
  attain unprecedented high-quality solar observations. We describe in
  detail the instrument design and expected stable diffraction-limited
  on-orbit performance of the OTA, the largest state-of-the-art solar
  telescope yet flown in space.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Analysis of Hinode/XRT Observations
Authors: Deluca, E. E.; Weber, M.; Savcheva, A.; Saar, S.; Testa,
   P.; Cirtain, J. W.; Sakao, T.; Noriyuki, N.; Kano, R.; Shimizu, T.
2008AGUSMSP51B..02D    Altcode:
  This poster will present the current state of Hinode/XRT analysis
  software. We will give an overview of the XRT Analysis Guide. We will
  include a detailed discussion of the following topics: <P />Co-alignment
  with SOT and EIS Spot removal for dynamics studies Filter calibration
  for thermal studies Dark calibrations <P />Sample data sets will be
  discussed and links to the data products will be provided.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Emergence of a helical flux rope and prominence formation
Authors: Okamoto, T. J.; Tsuneta, S.; Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Yokoyama,
   T.; Berger, T. E.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata, S.; Shibata,
   K.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title,
   A. M.
2008AGUSMSP43B..06O    Altcode:
  We report a discovery about emergence of a helical flux rope. The
  episode may be related to the formation and evolution of an active
  region prominence. Statistical studies by previous authors indicate that
  numerous prominences have the inverse-polarity configuration suggesting
  the helical magnetic configurations. There are two theoretical
  models about formation of such a coronal helical magnetic field in
  association with prominences: flux rope model and sheared-arcade
  model. We have so far no clear observational evidence to support
  either model. In order to find a clue about the formation of the
  prominence, we had continuous observations of NOAA AR 10953 with the
  SOT during 2007 April 28 to May 9. A prominence was located over the
  polarity inversion line in the south-east of the main sunspot. These
  observations provided us with a time series of vector magnetic fields
  on the photosphere under the prominence. We found four new features:
  (1) The abutting opposite-polarity regions on the two sides along
  the polarity inversion line first grew laterally in size and then
  narrowed. (2) These abutting regions contained vertically-weak,
  but horizontally-strong magnetic fields. (3) The orientations of
  the horizontal magnetic fields along the polarity inversion line on
  the photosphere gradually changed with time from a normal- polarity
  configuration to an inverse-polarity one. (4) The horizontal-magnetic
  field region was blueshifted. These indicate that helical flux rope
  emerges from below the photosphere into the corona along the polarity
  inversion line under the prominence. We suggest that this supply of a
  helical magnetic flux possibly into the corona is related to formation
  and maintenance of active-region prominences.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Photospheric Signature of Penumbral Microjets
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; Jurcak, J.; Ichimoto, K.; Suemtasu, Y.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Shimizu, T.; Berger, T. E.; Shine, R. A.; Tarbell, T. D.;
   Lites, B. W.
2008AGUSMSP53A..03K    Altcode:
  HINODE Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) discovered ubiquitous occurrence
  of fine-scale jetlike activities in penumbral chromospheres, which
  are referred to as penumbral microjets. The microjets' small width
  of 400 km and short duration of less than 1 min make them difficult
  to identify in existing ground-based observations. The apparent
  rise velocity is faster than 50km/s and is roughly comparable to
  the Alfven speed in the sunspot chromosphere. These properties of
  penumbral microjets suggest that magnetic reconnection in uncombed
  magnetic field configuration is the most possible cause of penumbral
  microjets. In order to understand magnetic configuration associated with
  penumbral microjets and prove the chromospheric magnetic reconnection
  hypothesis, we investigated relationship between penumbral microjets
  seen in CaIIH images and photospheric magnetic fields measured by
  the HINODE spectro-polarimeter. We found the inclination angles of
  penumbral microjets measured in CaII H images are roughly consistent
  with inclination angles of relatively vertical magnetic field
  component in uncombed magnetic field configuration. In addition,
  strong and transient downflows are observed in the photosphere near
  the boundary of a horizontal flux tube associated with a penumbral
  microjet. The size of the downflow region is about 300km, which is
  close to the width of penumbral microjets seen in CaII H images. The
  downflow velocity of several km/s might be a result of an outflow of
  chromospheric magnetic reconnection and suffer deceleration due to
  the higher density in the photosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Disintegration of Magnetic Flux in Decaying Sunspots as
    Observed with the Hinode/SOT
Authors: Kubo, M.; Lites, B. W.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Shine, R. A.; Title, A. M.; Nagata,
   S.; Tsuneta, S.
2008AGUSMSP31B..01K    Altcode:
  Continuous observations of sunspot penumbrae with the Solar Optical
  Telescope aboard Hinode clearly show that the outer boundary of the
  penumbra fluctuates around its averaged position. The penumbral outer
  boundary moves inward when granules appear in the outer penumbra. We
  discover that such granules appear one after another while moving
  magnetic features (MMFs) are separating from the penumbral "spines"
  (penumbral features having fields that are stronger and more vertical
  than their surroundings). These granules that appear in the outer
  penumbra often merge with bright features inside the penumbra that move
  with spines as they elongate toward the moat region. This suggests that
  convective motions around the penumbral outer boundary are related to
  disintegration of magnetic flux in the sunspot. We also find that dark
  penumbral filaments frequently elongate into the moat region in the
  vicinity of MMFs that detach from penumbral spines. Such elongating
  dark penumbral filaments correspond to nearly horizontal fields
  extending from the penumbra. Pairs of MMFs with positive and negative
  polarities are sometimes observed along the elongating dark penumbral
  filaments. This strongly supports the notion that such elongating dark
  penumbral filaments have magnetic fields with a "sea serpent"-like
  structure. Evershed flows, which are associated with the penumbral
  horizontal fields, may be related to detachment of the MMFs from the
  penumbral spines, as well as to the formation of the MMFs along the
  dark penumbral filaments that elongate into the moat region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Formation of Solar Magnetic Flux Tubes with Kilogauss Field
    Strength Induced by Convective Instability
Authors: Nagata, Shin'ichi; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Yokoyama,
   Takaaki; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Lites, Bruce W.; Shine, Richard A.;
   Berger, Thomas E.; Title, Alan M.; Bellot Rubio, Luis R.; Orozco
   Suárez, David
2008ApJ...677L.145N    Altcode:
  Convective instability has been a mechanism used to explain
  the formation of solar photospheric flux tubes with kG field
  strength. However, the turbulence of the Earth's atmosphere has
  prevented ground-based observers from examining the hypothesis
  with precise polarimetric measurement on the subarcsecond scale
  flux tubes. Here we discuss observational evidence of this scenario
  based on observations with the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard
  Hinode. The cooling of an equipartition field strength flux tube
  precedes a transient downflow reaching 6 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> and the
  intensification of the field strength to 2 kG. These observations
  agree very well with the theoretical predictions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Transient horizontal magnetic fields in solar plage regions
Authors: Ishikawa, R.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Isobe, H.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Lites, B. W.; Nagata, S.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.
2008A&A...481L..25I    Altcode: 2008arXiv0802.1769I
  Aims:We report the discovery of isolated, small-scale emerging
  magnetic fields in a plage region with the Solar Optical Telescope
  aboard Hinode. <BR />Methods: Spectro-polarimetric observations were
  carried out with a cadence of 34 s for the plage region located near
  disc center. The vector magnetic fields are inferred by Milne-Eddington
  inversion. <BR />Results: The observations reveal widespread occurrence
  of transient, spatially isolated horizontal magnetic fields. The
  lateral extent of the horizontal magnetic fields is comparable to
  the size of photospheric granules. These horizontal magnetic fields
  seem to be tossed about by upflows and downflows of the granular
  convection. We also report an event that appears to be driven by the
  magnetic buoyancy instability. We refer to buoyancy-driven emergence
  as type 1 and convection-driven emergence as type 2. Although both
  events have magnetic field strengths of about 600 G, the filling
  factor of type 1 is a factor of two larger than that of type 2. <BR
  />Conclusions: Our finding suggests that the granular convection in
  the plage regions is characterized by a high rate of occurrence of
  granular-sized transient horizontal fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Net circular polarization of sunspots in high spatial
    resolution
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Shimizu, T.; Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Tarbell, T. D.; Shine, R. A.;
   Title, A. M.; Nagata, S.
2008A&A...481L...9I    Altcode:
  Context: Net circular polarization (NCP) of spectral lines in
  sunspots has been most successfully explained by the presense of
  discontinuities in the magnetic field inclination and flow velocity
  along the line-of-sight in the geometry of the embedded flux tube model
  of penumbrae (Δγ-effect). <BR />Aims: The fine scale structure of
  NCP in a sunspot is examined with special attention paid to spatial
  relations of the Evershed flow to confirm the validity of the present
  interpretation of the NCP of sunspots. <BR />Methods: High resolution
  spectro-polarimetric data of a positive-polarity sunspot obtained
  by the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode are analysed. <BR
  />Results: A positive NCP is associated with the Evershed flow
  channels in both limb-side and disk center-side penumbrae and with
  upflows in the penumbra at disk center. The negative NCP in the disk
  center-side penumbra is generated in inter-Evershed flow channels. <BR
  />Conclusions: The first result is apparently inconsistent with the
  current explanation of NCP with the Δγ-effect but rather suggests a
  positive correlation between the magnetic field strength and the flow
  velocity as the cause of the NCP. The second result serves as strong
  evidence for the presence of gas flows in inter-Evershed flow channels.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode SOT Observations of Solar Quiescent Prominence Dynamics
Authors: Berger, Thomas E.; Shine, Richard A.; Slater, Gregory L.;
   Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Okamoto, Takenori J.; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku; Lites,
   Bruce W.; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2008ApJ...676L..89B    Altcode:
  We report findings from multihour 0.2” resolution movies of
  solar quiescent prominences (QPs) observed with the Solar Optical
  Telescope (SOT) on the Hinode satellite. The observations verify
  previous findings of filamentary downflows and vortices in QPs. SOT
  observations also verify large-scale transverse oscillations in QPs,
  with periods of 20-40 minutes and amplitudes of 2-5 Mm. The upward
  propagation speed of several waves is found to be ~10 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>,
  comparable to the sound speed of a 10,000 K plasma, implying that
  the waves are magnetoacoustic in origin. Most significantly, Hinode
  SOT observations reveal that dark, episodic upflows are common in
  QPs. The upflows are 170-700 km in width, exhibit turbulent flow,
  and rise with approximately constant speeds of ~20 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  from the base of the prominence to heights of ~10-20 Mm. The upflows
  are visible in both the Ca II H-line and Hα bandpasses of SOT. The new
  flows are seen in about half of the QPs observed by SOT to date. The
  dark upflows resemble buoyant starting plumes in both their velocity
  profile and flow structure. We discuss thermal and magnetic mechanisms
  as possible causes of the plumes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Emergence of a Helical Flux Rope under an Active Region
    Prominence
Authors: Okamoto, Takenori J.; Tsuneta, Saku; Lites, Bruce W.; Kubo,
   Masahito; Yokoyama, Takaaki; Berger, Thomas E.; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shibata, Kazunari; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore
   D.; Title, Alan M.
2008ApJ...673L.215O    Altcode: 2008arXiv0801.1956O
  Continuous observations were obtained of NOAA AR 10953 with the Solar
  Optical Telescope (SOT) on board the Hinode satellite from 2007 April
  28 to May 9. A prominence was located over the polarity inversion
  line (PIL) to the southeast of the main sunspot. These observations
  provided us with a time series of vector magnetic fields on the
  photosphere under the prominence. We found four features: (1) The
  abutting opposite-polarity regions on the two sides along the PIL first
  grew laterally in size and then narrowed. (2) These abutting regions
  contained vertically weak but horizontally strong magnetic fields. (3)
  The orientations of the horizontal magnetic fields along the PIL on
  the photosphere gradually changed with time from a normal-polarity
  configuration to an inverse-polarity one. (4) The horizontal magnetic
  field region was blueshifted. These indicate that helical flux rope
  was emerging from below the photosphere into the corona along the PIL
  under the preexisting prominence. We suggest that this supply of a
  helical magnetic flux to the corona is associated with evolution and
  maintenance of active region prominences.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Horizontal Magnetic Flux of the Quiet-Sun Internetwork
    as Observed with the Hinode Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Kubo, M.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Berger, T.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.
2008ApJ...672.1237L    Altcode:
  Observations of very quiet Sun using the Solar Optical
  Telescope/Spectro-Polarimeter (SOT/SP) aboard the Hinode spacecraft
  reveal that the quiet internetwork regions are pervaded by horizontal
  magnetic flux. The spatial average horizontal apparent flux density
  derived from wavelength-integrated measures of Zeeman-induced linear
  polarization is B<SUP>T</SUP><SUB>app</SUB> = 55 Mx cm <SUP>-2</SUP>, as
  compared to the corresponding average vertical apparent flux density of
  | B<SUP>L</SUP><SUB>app</SUB>| = 11 Mx cm <SUP>-2</SUP>. Distributions
  of apparent flux density are presented. Magnetic fields are organized on
  mesogranular scales, with both horizontal and vertical fields showing
  "voids" of reduced flux density of a few granules spatial extent. The
  vertical fields are concentrated in the intergranular lanes, whereas the
  stronger horizontal fields are somewhat separated spatially from the
  vertical fields and occur most commonly at the edges of the bright
  granules. High-S/N observations from disk center to the limb help
  to constrain possible causes of the apparent imbalance between |
  B<SUP>L</SUP><SUB>app</SUB>| and B<SUP>T</SUP><SUB>app</SUB>, with
  unresolved structures of linear dimension on the surface smaller by at
  least a factor of 2 relative to the SOT/SP angular resolution being one
  likely cause of this discrepancy. Other scenarios for explaining this
  imbalance are discussed. The horizontal fields are likely the source of
  the "seething" fields of the quiet Sun discovered by Harvey et al. The
  horizontal fields may also contribute to the "hidden" turbulent flux
  suggested by studies involving Hanle effect depolarization of scattered
  radiation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observations of Flux Emergence in Quiet and Active
    Regions
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Centeno, R.; Kubo, M.; Socas-Navarro, H. Berger,
   T.; Frank, Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.
2008ASPC..383...71L    Altcode:
  We review briefly the observational understanding of emergence of
  flux in both the quiet Sun and active regions in the light of first
  results from the joint Japan/US/UK Hinode mission. That spacecraft
  is now providing us with our first continuous, high resolution
  measurements of the photospheric vector magnetic field, along with
  high resolution observations of the thermal and dynamic properties
  of the chromosphere and corona. This review is intended to present a
  few very early results and to highlight the potential for discovery
  offered by this extraordinary new mission. The discovery of ubiquitous
  horizontal magnetic flux in the quiet internetwork regions is presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mangetic field properties at the footpoints of solar
    microflares (active-region transient brightenings)
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kano, R.; Katsukawa, Y.; Kubo, M.; Deluca, E.;
   Ichimoto, K.; Lites, B.; Nagata, S.; Sakao, T.; Shine, R.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Tsuneta, S.
2007AGUFMSH52C..06S    Altcode:
  Solar active regions produce numerous numbers of small-scale explosive
  energy releases, i.e., microflares, which are captured by imaging
  observations in soft X-rays as transient brightenings of small-scale
  coronal loops. Thanks to advanced performance of X-Ray Telescope (XRT)
  onboard the Hinode satellite, we can investigate finer structure
  of the brightening X-ray sources in more details than we did with
  Yohkoh data. One of important questions on microflares is what causes
  microflares. The simultaneous visible-light observations by the Solar
  Optical Telescope (SOT) allow us to explore magnetic activities
  and magnetic field configuration at the photospheric footpoints
  of brightening loops, giving key observations to investigate the
  question. For our investigations of corona-photosphere magnetic
  coupling, we have established co-alignment between SOT and XRT
  with accuracy better than 1 arcsec (Shimizu et al. 2007, PASJ in
  press). It turns out that Ca II H observations are very useful
  to identify the exact positions of footpoints of X-ray transient
  brightening loops. Small "Kernels" are sometimes observed in Ca II H
  and they may be signature of highly accelerated non-thermal particles
  impinging on chromosphere. As already shown in Shimizu et al.(2002),
  frequent transient brightenings are observed at the locations where
  emerging activities are on going. However, another type of brightening
  triggering mechanism should exist to explain some observed multiple-loop
  brightenings. In the multiple-loop brightenings, multiple loops are
  magnetically in parallel with each other and no apparent magnetic
  activities, such as emerging and canceling, are observed at and near
  the footpoints. This paper will present SOT observations of some
  microflares observed with XRT.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small-Scale Jetlike Features in Penumbral Chromospheres
Authors: Katsukawa, Y.; Berger, T. E.; Ichimoto, K.; Lites, B. W.;
   Nagata, S.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.;
   Title, A. M.; Tsuneta, S.
2007Sci...318.1594K    Altcode:
  We observed fine-scale jetlike features, referred to as penumbral
  microjets, in chromospheres of sunspot penumbrae. The microjets
  were identified in image sequences of a sunspot taken through a Ca II
  H-line filter on the Solar Optical Telescope on board the Japanese solar
  physics satellite Hinode. The microjets’ small width of 400 kilometers
  and short duration of less than 1 minute make them difficult to identify
  in existing observations. The microjets are possibly caused by magnetic
  reconnection in the complex magnetic configuration in penumbrae and
  have the potential to heat the corona above a sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Alfvénic Waves Strong Enough to Power the
    Solar Wind
Authors: De Pontieu, B.; McIntosh, S. W.; Carlsson, M.; Hansteen,
   V. H.; Tarbell, T. D.; Schrijver, C. J.; Title, A. M.; Shine, R. A.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.;
   Nagata, S.
2007Sci...318.1574D    Altcode:
  Alfvén waves have been invoked as a possible mechanism for the heating
  of the Sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, to millions of degrees and
  for the acceleration of the solar wind to hundreds of kilometers per
  second. However, Alfvén waves of sufficient strength have not been
  unambiguously observed in the solar atmosphere. We used images of
  high temporal and spatial resolution obtained with the Solar Optical
  Telescope onboard the Japanese Hinode satellite to reveal that the
  chromosphere, the region sandwiched between the solar surface and
  the corona, is permeated by Alfvén waves with strong amplitudes on
  the order of 10 to 25 kilometers per second and periods of 100 to
  500 seconds. Estimates of the energy flux carried by these waves and
  comparisons with advanced radiative magnetohydrodynamic simulations
  indicate that such Alfvén waves are energetic enough to accelerate
  the solar wind and possibly to heat the quiet corona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Anemone Jets as Evidence of Ubiquitous
    Reconnection
Authors: Shibata, Kazunari; Nakamura, Tahei; Matsumoto, Takuma; Otsuji,
   Kenichi; Okamoto, Takenori J.; Nishizuka, Naoto; Kawate, Tomoko;
   Watanabe, Hiroko; Nagata, Shin'ichi; UeNo, Satoru; Kitai, Reizaburo;
   Nozawa, Satoshi; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Berger,
   Thomas E.; Lites, Bruce W.; Shine, Richard A.; Title, Alan M.
2007Sci...318.1591S    Altcode: 2008arXiv0810.3974S
  The heating of the solar chromosphere and corona is a long-standing
  puzzle in solar physics. Hinode observations show the ubiquitous
  presence of chromospheric anemone jets outside sunspots in active
  regions. They are typically 3 to 7 arc seconds = 2000 to 5000 kilometers
  long and 0.2 to 0.4 arc second = 150 to 300 kilometers wide, and their
  velocity is 10 to 20 kilometers per second. These small jets have an
  inverted Y-shape, similar to the shape of x-ray anemone jets in the
  corona. These features imply that magnetic reconnection similar to that
  in the corona is occurring at a much smaller spatial scale throughout
  the chromosphere and suggest that the heating of the solar chromosphere
  and corona may be related to small-scale ubiquitous reconnection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Twisting Motions of Sunspot Penumbral Filaments
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.; Lites, B. W.;
   Kubo, M.; Nagata, S.
2007Sci...318.1597I    Altcode:
  The penumbra of a sunspot is composed of numerous thin, radially
  extended, bright and dark filaments carrying outward gas flows
  (the Evershed flow). Using high-resolution images obtained by the
  Solar Optical Telescope aboard the solar physics satellite Hinode, we
  discovered a number of penumbral bright filaments revealing twisting
  motions about their axes. These twisting motions are observed only
  in penumbrae located in the direction perpendicular to the symmetry
  line connecting the sunspot center and the solar disk center, and
  the direction of the twist (that is, lateral motions of intensity
  fluctuation across filaments) is always from limb side to disk-center
  side. Thus, the twisting feature is not an actual twist or turn of
  filaments but a manifestation of dynamics of penumbral filaments with
  three-dimensional radiative transfer effects.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Field Properties of Flux Cancellation Sites
Authors: Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.
2007ApJ...671..990K    Altcode:
  It has been frequently observed in longitudinal magnetograms that
  magnetic elements disappear when a magnetic polarity element approaches
  and collides with another polarity element. We examine 12 collision
  events observed with the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter. We find formation
  of new magnetic connection between the colliding opposite polarity
  elements both in the photosphere and in the corona. In some cases,
  the opposite polarity elements to be collided appear at different
  times and at widely separated positions. Magnetic fields horizontal to
  the solar surface are spontaneously formed on the polarity inversion
  line (PIL) between such colliding elements, and transient bright X-ray
  loops connecting the opposite polarity elements appear. We suggest that
  formation of the coronal loops and the photospheric horizontal fields
  are due to magnetic reconnection between the colliding field lines,
  possibly at multiple locations with different heights. We also find that
  a global change in the direction of the photospheric horizontal fields
  between the colliding elements occurs in association with formation
  and disappearance of Hα dark filaments. Initial horizontal fields
  perpendicular to the PIL become parallel to the PIL, when dark filaments
  are observed along the PIL. They return to being perpendicular to the
  PIL at around the time of the disappearance of the dark filament. <P
  />This work was completed while the author was affiliated with the
  National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and University of Tokyo.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Continuous Plasma Outflows from the Edge of a Solar Active
    Region as a Possible Source of Solar Wind
Authors: Sakao, Taro; Kano, Ryouhei; Narukage, Noriyuki; Kotoku,
   Jun'ichi; Bando, Takamasa; DeLuca, Edward E.; Lundquist, Loraine L.;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Harra, Louise K.; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Matsuzaki, Keiichi; Shimojo, Masumi; Bookbinder, Jay
   A.; Golub, Leon; Korreck, Kelly E.; Su, Yingna; Shibasaki, Kiyoto;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Nakatani, Ichiro
2007Sci...318.1585S    Altcode:
  The Sun continuously expels a huge amount of ionized material into
  interplanetary space as the solar wind. Despite its influence on the
  heliospheric environment, the origin of the solar wind has yet to
  be well identified. In this paper, we report Hinode X-ray Telescope
  observations of a solar active region. At the edge of the active region,
  located adjacent to a coronal hole, a pattern of continuous outflow of
  soft-x-ray emitting plasmas was identified emanating along apparently
  open magnetic field lines and into the upper corona. Estimates of
  temperature and density for the outflowing plasmas suggest a mass
  loss rate that amounts to ~1/4 of the total mass loss rate of the
  solar wind. These outflows may be indicative of one of the solar wind
  sources at the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode SOT observations of plume upflows and cascading
    downflows in quiescent solar prominences
Authors: Berger, T.; Shine, R.; Slater, G.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.;
   Lites, B.; Tsuneta, S.; Okamoto, T. J.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Sekii, T.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.
2007AGUFMSH53A1065B    Altcode:
  We present several Hinode SOT filtergram movies of quiescent solar
  prominences that show newly discovered "plume-like" upflows and
  cascading "waterfall-like" downflows that persist for the entire
  multi-hour duration of the observations. The flow speeds are on the
  order of 10 km/sec with typical widths of 400-700 km. Preliminary
  calculations show that if the upflows are buoyancy driven, the
  associated thermal perturbation is on the order of 10,000 K, sufficient
  to explain the dark appearance of the upflows in the interference
  filter passbands. In addition we observe rotational vortices and
  body oscillations within the prominences. These new observations
  challenge current magnetostatic models of solar prominences by showing
  that prominence plasmas are in constant motion, often in directions
  perpendicular to the magnetic field lines proposed by the models. TRACE,
  Hinode/EIS, and Hinode/XRT observations are used to investigate the
  differential topology of the flows across temperature regimes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal Transverse Magnetohydrodynamic Waves in a Solar
    Prominence
Authors: Okamoto, T. J.; Tsuneta, S.; Berger, T. E.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Lites, B. W.; Nagata, S.; Shibata, K.; Shimizu, T.;
   Shine, R. A.; Suematsu, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.
2007Sci...318.1577O    Altcode: 2008arXiv0801.1958O
  Solar prominences are cool 10<SUP>4</SUP> kelvin plasma clouds
  supported in the surrounding 10<SUP>6</SUP> kelvin coronal plasma by
  as-yet-undetermined mechanisms. Observations from Hinode show fine-scale
  threadlike structures oscillating in the plane of the sky with periods
  of several minutes. We suggest that these represent Alfvén waves
  propagating on coronal magnetic field lines and that these may play
  a role in heating the corona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Quiet-Sun Internetwork Magnetic Fields from the Inversion of
    Hinode Measurements
Authors: Orozco Suárez, D.; Bellot Rubio, L. R.; del Toro Iniesta,
   J. C.; Tsuneta, S.; Lites, B. W.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata,
   S.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu, Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title,
   A. M.
2007ApJ...670L..61O    Altcode: 2007arXiv0710.1405O
  We analyze Fe I 630 nm observations of the quiet Sun at disk center
  taken with the spectropolarimeter of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard
  the Hinode satellite. A significant fraction of the scanned area,
  including granules, turns out to be covered by magnetic fields. We
  derive field strength and inclination probability density functions from
  a Milne-Eddington inversion of the observed Stokes profiles. They show
  that the internetwork consists of very inclined, hG fields. As expected,
  network areas exhibit a predominance of kG field concentrations. The
  high spatial resolution of Hinode's spectropolarimetric measurements
  brings to an agreement the results obtained from the analysis of
  visible and near-infrared lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Center-to-Limb Variation of Stokes V Asymmetries in Solar
    Pores Observed with the Hinode Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Morinaga, Shuji; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.;
   Lites, Bruce; Kubo, Masahito; Sakurai, Takashi
2007PASJ...59S.613M    Altcode:
  Here we present spectro-polarimetric measurements of several pores
  and the surrounding regions taken with the Solar Optical Telescope
  aboard Hinode at various viewing angles. We analyzed the Stokes V
  area asymmetry, and confirmed that it is depressed at the center of
  the pores, while it shows large positive values (a blue lobe larger
  than a red lobe) in the surrounding area; this is consistent with a
  previous report. In addition to this ring of positive asymmetry, we
  found regions of alternating positive and negative area asymmetries
  when weak V regions were observed near the solar limb. The positive
  asymmetry occurs on the disk-center side and the negative asymmetry
  on the limb side of the magnetic concentrations. These center-to-limb
  variations of the Stokes V area asymmetry can be interpreted as being
  a systematic inflow of plasma into the magnetic concentrations from
  their surroundings.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Initial Results on Line-of-Sight Field Calibrations of SP/NFI
    Data Taken by SOT/Hinode
Authors: Chae, Jongchul; Moon, Yong-Jae; Park, Young-Deuk; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Sakurai, Takashi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Tarbell,
   Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Lites, Bruce; Kubo, Masahito; Nagata,
   Shin'ichi; Yokoyama, Takaaki
2007PASJ...59S.619C    Altcode:
  We present initial results on the line-of-sight field calibration
  of the two kinds of Stokes I and V data taken by the Solar Optical
  Telescope on the satellite Hinode: spectral profiles of Stokes I and V
  parameters recorded on the Spectro-polarimeter (SP), and monochromatic
  images of the same parameters recorded on the Narrow-band Filter Imager
  (NFI). By applying the center-of-gravity method to the SP data of
  AR10930 taken on 2006 December 11, we determined the line-of-sight field
  at every location in the active region. As a result, we found that the
  line-of-sight field strength ranges up to 2kG in plages, even without
  taking into account the filling factor, and up to 3.5kG or higher values
  inside the umbra of the major sunspot. We calibrated the NFI data in
  reference to the field determined from the SP data. In regions outside
  the sunspots and the penumbral regions, we adopted a linear relation,
  B<SUB>||</SUB> = βV / I, between the circular polarization, V / I,
  and the line-of-sight field strength, B<SUB>||</SUB>, and obtained β =
  23.5kG in regions outside the sunspots, and β = 12.0kG in penumbral
  regions. In umbral regions of sunspots, a first-order polynomial was
  adopted to model the reversal of the polarization signal over the
  field strength.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Response of the Solar Atmosphere to Magnetic Flux Emergence
    from Hinode Observations
Authors: Li, Hui; Sakurai, Takashi; Ichimito, Kiyoshi; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine,
   Richard A.; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Lites, Bruce; Kubo,
   Masahito; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Kotoku, Jun; Shibasaki, Kiyoto; Saar,
   Steven H.; Bobra, Monica
2007PASJ...59S.643L    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Initial Helioseismic Observations by Hinode/SOT
Authors: Sekii, Takashi; Kosovichev, Alexander G.; Zhao, Junwei;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Shibahashi, Hiromoto; Berger, Thomas E.; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore
   D.; Title, Alan M.
2007PASJ...59S.637S    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.1806S
  Results from initial helioseismic observations by the Solar Optical
  Telescope on-board Hinode are reported. It has been demonstrated
  that intensity oscillation data from the Broadband Filter Imager
  can be used for various helioseismic analyses. The k - ω power
  spectra, as well as the corresponding time-distance cross-correlation
  function, which promise high-resolution time-distance analysis below
  the 6-Mm travelling distance, were obtained for G-band and CaII-H
  data. Subsurface supergranular patterns were observed from our first
  time-distance analysis. The results show that the solar oscillation
  spectrum is extended to much higher frequencies and wavenumbers, and
  the time-distance diagram is extended to much shorter travel distances
  and times than were observed before, thus revealing great potential
  for high-resolution helioseismic observations from Hinode.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Feature and Morphological Study of X-Ray Bright
    Points with Hinode
Authors: Kotoku, Jun'ichi; Kano, Ryouhei; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Sakao, Taro; Shibazaki, Kiyoto; Deluca,
   Edward E.; Korreck, Kelly E.; Golub, Leon; Bobra, Monica
2007PASJ...59S.735K    Altcode:
  We observed X-ray bright points (XBPs) in a quiet region of the Sun
  with the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) aboard the Hinode satellite on 2006
  December 19. XRT's high-resolution X-ray images revealed many XBPs with
  complicated structure and evolving dramatically with time. Almost all
  of the dynamic eruptions in the quiet region were composed of XBPs,
  and they had either loop or multiloop shapes, as is observed in larger
  flares. Brightening XBPs had strong magnetic fields with opposite
  polarities near their footpoints. While we have found a possible
  example of associated magnetic cancellation, other XBPs brighten and
  fade without any associated movement of the photospheric magnetic field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observations of Horizontal Quiet Sun Magnetic Flux
    and the “Hidden Turbulent Magnetic Flux”
Authors: Lites, Bruce; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Kubo, Masahito; Berger,
   Thomas; Frank, Zoe; Shine, Richard A.; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title,
   Alan M.; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2007PASJ...59S.571L    Altcode:
  We present observations of magnetic fields of the very quiet Sun
  near disk center using the Spectro-Polarimeter of the Solar Optical
  Telescope aboard the Hinode satellite. These observations reveal for
  the first time the ubiquitous presence of horizontal magnetic fields in
  the internetwork regions. The horizontal fields are spatially distinct
  from the vertical fields, demonstrating that they are not arising mainly
  from buffeting of vertical flux tubes by the granular convection. The
  horizontal component has an average “apparent flux density” of
  55Mxcm<SUP>-2</SUP> (assuming the horizontal field structures are
  spatially resolved), in contrast to the average apparent vertical flux
  density of 11Mxcm<SUP>-2</SUP>. The vertical fields reside mainly in
  the intergranular lanes, whereas the horizontal fields occur mainly
  over the bright granules, with a preference to be near the outside
  edge of the bright granules. The large apparent imbalance of vertical
  and horizontal flux densities is discussed, and several scenarios are
  presented to explain this imbalance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Strategy for the Inversion of Hinode Spectropolarimetric
    Measurements in the Quiet Sun
Authors: Orozco Suárez, David; Bellot Rubio, Luis R.; Del Toro
   Iniesta, Jose Carlos; Tsuneta, Saku; Lites, Bruce; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine,
   Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.
2007PASJ...59S.837O    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.2033O
  In this paper we propose an inversion strategy for the analysis of
  spectropolarimetric measurements taken by Hinode in the quiet Sun. The
  Spectro-Polarimeter of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode records
  the Stokes spectra of the FeI line pair at 630.2nm with unprecendented
  angular resolution, high spectral resolution, and high sensitivity. We
  discuss the need to consider a local stray-light contamination to
  account for the effects of telescope diffraction. The strategy is
  applied to observations of a wide quiet Sun area at disk center. Using
  these data we examine the influence of noise and initial guess models
  in the inversion results. Our analysis yields the distributions of
  magnetic field strengths and stray-light factors. They show that quiet
  Sun internetwork regions consist mainly of hG fields with stray-light
  contamination of about 0.8.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Calibration for Precise Image Co-Alignment between
    SOT and XRT (2006 November-2007 April)
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Matsuzaki, Keiichi;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Kano, Ryohei; Deluca, Edward E.; Lundquist,
   Loraine L.; Weber, Mark; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Shine, Richard A.;
   Sôma, Mitsuru; Tsuneta, Saku; Sakao, Taro; Minesugi, Kenji
2007PASJ...59S.845S    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.4098S
  To understand the physical mechanisms for activity and heating in
  the solar atmosphere, the magnetic coupling from the photosphere
  to the corona is an important piece of information from the Hinode
  observations, and therefore precise positional alignment is required
  among the data acquired by different telescopes. The Hinode spacecraft
  and its onboard telescopes were developed to allow us to investigate
  magnetic coupling with co-alignment accuracy better than 1". Using
  the Mercury transit observed on 2006 November 8 and co-alignment
  measurements regularly performed on a weekly basis, we have determined
  the information necessary for precise image co-alignment, and have
  confirmed that co-alignment better than 1" can be realized between
  Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) and X-Ray Telescope (XRT) with our
  baseline co-alignment method. This paper presents results from the
  calibration for precise co-alignment of CCD images from SOT and XRT.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Observations of a Vector Magnetic Field Change
    Associated with a Flare on 2006 December 13
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Yokoyama, Takaaki; Katsukawa, Yukio; Lites,
   Bruce; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Shine, Richard A.;
   Title, Alan M.; Elmore David
2007PASJ...59S.779K    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.2397K
  Continuous observations of the flare productive active region 10930
  were successfully carried out with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard
  the Hinode spacecraft during 2006 December 6 to 19. We focused on the
  evolution of photospheric magnetic fields in this active region, and the
  magnetic field properties at the site of the X3.4 class flare, using
  a time series of vector field maps with high spatial resolution. The
  X3.4 class flare occurred on 2006 December 13 at the apparent
  collision site between the large, opposite polarity umbrae. Elongated
  magnetic structures with alternatingly positive and negative polarities
  resulting from flux emergence appeared one day before the flare in the
  collision site penumbra. Subsequently, the polarity inversion line
  at the collision site became very complicated. The number of bright
  loops in CaII H increased during the formation of these elongated
  magnetic structures. Flare ribbons and bright loops evolved along
  the polarity inversion line and one footpoint of the bright loop was
  located in a region having a large departure of the field azimuth angle
  with respect to its surroundings. SOT observations with high spatial
  resolution and high polarization precision revealed temporal change in
  the fine structure of magnetic fields at the flare site: some parts of
  the complicated polarity inversion line then disappeared, and in those
  regions the azimuth angle of the photospheric magnetic field changed by
  about 90°, becoming more spatially uniform within the collision site.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Analysis of Penumbral Fine Structure Using an Advanced
    Inversion Technique
Authors: Jurcák, Jan; Bellot Rubio, Luis; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Tsuneta,
   Saku
2007PASJ...59S.601J    Altcode: 2007arXiv0707.1560J
  We present a method to study the penumbral fine structure using data
  obtained by the spectropolarimeter on board Hinode. For the first
  time, the penumbral filaments can be considered as being resolved in
  spectropolarimetric measurements. This enables us to use inversion
  codes with only one-component model atmospheres, and thus to assign
  the obtained stratifications of the plasma parameters directly to the
  penumbral fine structure. This approach was applied to the limb-side
  part of the penumbra in the active region NOAA10923. Preliminary results
  show a clear dependence of the plasma parameters on the continuum
  intensity in the inner penumbra, i.e., a weaker and horizontal magnetic
  field along with an increased line-of-sight velocity are found in the
  low layers of the bright filaments. The results in the mid penumbra
  are ambiguous, and future analyses are necessary to unveil the magnetic
  field structure and other plasma parameters there.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Fine-Scale Structures of the Evershed Effect Observed by the
    Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode
Authors: Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shine, Richard A.; Lites, Bruce; Kubo,
   Masahito; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Nagata,
   Shin'ichi; Yokoyama, Takaaki; Shimojo, Masumi
2007PASJ...59S.593I    Altcode:
  The small-scale structure of the Evershed effect is being studied
  using data obtained by the Spectropolarimeter and the Broadband Filter
  Imager of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode. We find that the
  Evershed flow starts at the leading edge of inwardly migrating bright
  penumbral grains, and turns to nearly a horizontal flow preferentially
  in the dark lanes of the penumbra. A number of small elongated regions
  that have an upward motion of ∼ 1kms<SUP>-1</SUP> are found in the
  deep photosphere distributed over the penumbra. They are cospatial
  with bright grains and have relatively horizontal magnetic fields. A
  number of patches having a strong downward motion associated with the
  opposite magnetic polarity from the sunspot are also found in the mid
  and outer penumbra. They could be identified as foot points of the
  Evershed flow channels, though the identification of individual pairs
  is not straightforward. Our results provide strong support for some
  recent findings from ground-based high-resolution observations, and
  are in general agreement with the well-known picture of the uncombed
  structure of the penumbra, in which the penumbrae consist of rising
  flux tubes carrying nearly horizontal Evershed flows embedded in more
  vertical background magnetic fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flare Ribbons Observed with G-band and FeI 6302Å, Filters
    of the Solar Optical Telescope on Board Hinode
Authors: Isobe, Hiroaki; Kubo, Masahito; Minoshima, Takashi; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Tsuneta, Saku; Berger,
   Thomas E.; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine,
   Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Title, Alan M.
2007PASJ...59S.807I    Altcode: 2007arXiv0711.3946I
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) on board the Hinode satellite observed
  an X3.4 class flare on 2006 December 13. A typical two-ribbon structure
  was observed, not only in the chromospheric CaII H line, but also in
  the G-band and FeI 6302Å line. The high-resolution, seeing-free images
  achieved by SOT revealed, for the first time, sub-arcsec fine structures
  of the “white light” flare. The G-band flare ribbons on sunspot
  umbrae showed a sharp leading edge, followed by a diffuse inside,
  as well as a previously known core-halo structure. The underlying
  structures, such as umbral dots, penumbral filaments, and granules,
  were visible in the flare ribbons. Assuming that the sharp leading
  edge was directly heated by a particle beam and the diffuse parts were
  heated by radiative back-warming, we estimated the depth of the diffuse
  flare emission using an intensity profile of the flare ribbon. We found
  that the depth of the diffuse emission was about 100km or less from
  the height of the source of radiative back-warming. The flare ribbons
  were also visible in the Stokes-V images of FeI 6302Å, as a transient
  polarity reversal. This is probably related to a “magnetic transient”
  reported in the literature. The intensity increase in Stokes-I images
  indicates that the FeI 6302Å line was significantly deformed by the
  flare, which may cause such a magnetic transient.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small-Scale Magnetic-Flux Emergence Observed with Hinode
    Solar Optical Telescope
Authors: Otsuji, Kenichi; Shibata, Kazunari; Kitai, Reizaburo; Ueno,
   Satoru; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Matsumoto, Takuma; Nakamura, Tahei;
   Watanabe, Hiroko; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Katsukawa, Yukio; Tarbell, Theodore D.;
   Lites, Bruce; Shine, Richard A.; Title Alan M.
2007PASJ...59S.649O    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.3207O
  We observed small-scale magnetic-flux emergence in a sunspot moat region
  by the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode satellite. We
  analyzed filtergram images observed at wavelengths of Fe 6302Å, G band,
  and CaII H. In Stokes I images of Fe 6302Å, emerging magnetic flux was
  recognized as dark lanes. In the G band, they showed to be their shapes
  almost the same as in Stokes I images. These magnetic fluxes appeared
  as dark filaments in CaII H images. Stokes V images of Fe 6302Å showed
  pairs of opposite polarities at footpoints of each filament. These
  magnetic concentrations were identified to correspond to bright points
  in G band/CaII H images. From an analysis of time-sliced diagrams, we
  derived the following properties of emerging flux, which are consistent
  with those of previous studies: (1) Two footpoints separate each other
  at a speed of 4.2kms<SUP>-1</SUP> during the initial phase of evolution,
  and decrease to about 1kms<SUP>-1</SUP> 10minutes later. (2) CaII H
  filaments appear almost simultaneously with the formation of dark lanes
  in Stokes I in an observational cadence of 2minutes. (3) The lifetime
  of the dark lanes in the Stokes I and G band is 8minutes, while that
  of Ca filament is 12minutes. An interesting phenomena was observed,
  that an emerging flux tube expanded laterally in the photosphere with a
  speed of 3.8kms<SUP>-1</SUP>. A discussion on the horizontal expansion
  of the flux tube is given with refernce to previous simulation studies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of Sunspot Oscillations in G Band and CaII H
    Line with Solar Optical Telescope on Hinode
Authors: Nagashima, Kaori; Sekii, Takashi; Kosovichev, Alexander G.;
   Shibahashi, Hiromoto; Tsuneta, Saku; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine,
   Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.
2007PASJ...59S.631N    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.0569N
  Exploiting high-resolution observations made by the Solar Optical
  Telescope on board Hinode, we investigate the spatial distribution
  of the power spectral density of the oscillatory signal in and around
  the active region NOAA 10935. The G-band data show that in the umbra
  the oscillatory power is suppressed in all frequency ranges. On
  the other hand, in CaII H intensity maps oscillations in the umbra,
  so-called umbral flashes, are clearly seen with the power peaking around
  5.5mHz. The CaII H power distribution shows the enhanced elements with
  the spatial scale of the umbral flashes over most of the umbra, but
  there is a region with suppressed power at the center of the umbra. The
  origin and property of this node-like feature remain unexplained.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode SP Vector Magnetogram of AR10930 and Its
    Cross-Comparison with MDI
Authors: Moon, Yong-Jae; Kim, Yeon-Han; Park, Young-Deuk; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Sakurai, Takashi; Chae, Jongchul; Cho, Kyung Suk; Bong,
   Suchan; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimojo,
   Masumi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Tarbell, Theodore D.;
   Title, Alan M.; Lites, Bruce; Kubo, Masahito; Nagata, Shin'ichi;
   Yokoyama, Takaaki
2007PASJ...59S.625M    Altcode:
  We present one Hinode Spectropolarimeter (SP) magnetogram of AR 10930
  that produced several major flares. The inversion from Stokes profiles
  to magnetic field vectors was made using the standard Milne-Eddington
  code. We successfully applied the Uniform Shear Method for resolving
  the 180° ambiguity to the magnetogram. The inversion gave very strong
  magnetic field strengths (near 4500 gauss) for a small portion of area
  in the umbra. Considering that the observed V-profile of 6301.5Å was
  well-fitted as well as a direct estimation of the Zeeman splitting
  results in 4300-4600 gauss, we think that the field strengths
  should not be far from the actual value. A cross-comparison of the
  Hinode SP and SOHO MDI high resolution flux densities shows that the
  MDI flux density could be significantly underestimated by about a
  factor of two. In addition, it has a serious negative correlation
  (the so-called Zeeman saturation effect) with the Hinode SP flux
  density for umbral regions. Finally, we could successfully obtain
  a recalibrated MDI magnetogram that has been corrected for the
  Zeeman saturation effect using not only a pair of MDI intensity and
  magnetogram data simultaneously observed, but also the relationship
  from the cross-comparison between the Hinode SP and MDI flux densities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Formation Process of a Light Bridge Revealed with the Hinode
    Solar Optical Telescope
Authors: Katsukawa, Yukio; Yokoyama, Takaaki; Berger, Thomas E.;
   Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Kubo, Masahito; Lites, Bruce; Nagata, Shin'ichi;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shine, Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarbell,
   Theodore D.; Title, Alan M.; Tsuneta, Saku
2007PASJ...59S.577K    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.2527K
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) on-board Hinode successfully and
  continuously observed the formation process of a light bridge in a
  matured sunspot of the NOAA active region 10923 for several days with
  high spatial resolution. During its formation, many umbral dots were
  observed to be emerging from the leading edges of penumbral filaments,
  and rapidly intruding into the umbra. The precursor of the light bridge
  formation was also identified as a relatively slow inward motion of
  the umbral dots, which emerged not near the penumbra, but inside the
  umbra. The spectro-polarimeter on SOT provided physical conditions in
  the photosphere around the umbral dots and the light bridges. We found
  that the light bridges and the umbral dots had significantly weaker
  magnetic fields associated with upflows relative to the core of the
  umbra, which implies that there was hot gas with weak field strength
  penetrating from the subphotosphere to near the visible surface inside
  those structures. There needs to be a mechanism to drive the inward
  motion of the hot gas along the light bridges. We suggest that the
  emergence and the inward motion are triggered by a buoyant penumbral
  flux tube as well as subphotospheric flow crossing the sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Umbral Fine Structures in Sunspots Observed with Hinode Solar
    Optical Telescope
Authors: Kitai, Reizaburo; Watanabe, Hiroko; Nakamura, Tahei; Otsuji,
   Ken-ichi; Matsumoto, Takuma; UeNo, Satoru; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shibata,
   Kazunari; Muller, Richard; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu,
   Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tarbell, Theodore D.;
   Shine, Richard A.; Title, Alan M.; Lites, Bruce
2007PASJ...59S.585K    Altcode: 2007arXiv0711.3266K
  A high resolution imaging observation of a sunspot umbra was made with
  the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope. Filtergrams at wavelengths of the
  blue and green continua were taken during three consecutive days. The
  umbra consisted of a dark core region, several diffuse components,
  and numerous umbral dots. We derived basic properties of umbral dots
  (UDs), especially their temperatures, lifetimes, proper motions,
  spatial distribution, and morphological evolution. The brightness
  of UDs is confirmed to depend on the brightness of their surrounding
  background. Several UDs show fission and fusion. Thanks to the stable
  condition of the space observation, we could for the first time follow
  the temporal behavior of these events. The derived properties of the
  internal structure of the umbra are discussed from the viewpoint of
  magnetoconvection in a strong magnetic field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On Connecting the Dynamics of the Chromosphere and Transition
    Region with Hinode SOT and EIS
Authors: Hansteen, Viggo H.; de Pontieu, Bart; Carlsson, Mats;
   McIntosh, Scott; Watanabe, Tetsuya; Warren, Harry P.; Harra, Louise K.;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Shine, Dick; Title, Alan M.;
   Schrijver, Carolus J.; Tsuneta, Saku; Katsukawa, Yukio; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu, Toshifumi
2007PASJ...59S.699H    Altcode: 2007arXiv0711.0487H
  We use coordinated Hinode SOT/EIS observations that include
  high-resolution magnetograms, chromospheric, and transition region
  (TR) imaging, and TR/coronal spectra in a first test to study how
  the dynamics of the TR are driven by the highly dynamic photospheric
  magnetic fields and the ubiquitous chromospheric waves. Initial
  analysis shows that these connections are quite subtle and require a
  combination of techniques including magnetic field extrapolations,
  frequency-filtered time-series, and comparisons with synthetic
  chromospheric and TR images from advanced 3D numerical simulations. As a
  first result, we find signatures of magnetic flux emergence as well as
  3 and 5mHz wave power above regions of enhanced photospheric magnetic
  field in both chromospheric, transition region, and coronal emission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Can High Frequency Acoustic Waves Heat the Quiet Sun
    Chromosphere?
Authors: Carlsson, Mats; Hansteen, Viggo H.; de Pontieu, Bart;
   McIntosh, Scott; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Shine, Dick; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Nagata, Shin'ichi
2007PASJ...59S.663C    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.3462C
  We use Hinode/SOT Ca II H-line and blue continuum broadband observations
  to study the presence and power of high frequency acoustic waves at
  high spatial resolution. We find that there is no dominant power at
  small spatial scales; the integrated power using the full resolution of
  Hinode (0.05” pixels, 0.16” resolution) is larger than the power in
  the data degraded to 0.5” pixels (TRACE pixel size) by only a factor
  of 1.2. At 20 mHz the ratio is 1.6. Combining this result with the
  estimates of the acoustic flux based on TRACE data of Fossum &amp;
  Carlsson (2006), we conclude that the total energy flux in acoustic
  waves of frequency 5-40 mHz entering the internetwork chromosphere of
  the quiet Sun is less than 800 W m$^{-2}$, inadequate to balance the
  radiative losses in a static chromosphere by a factor of five.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Formation of Moving Magnetic Features and Penumbral Magnetic
    Fields with Hinode/SOT
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Nagata,
   Shin'ichi; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Shine, Richard A.; Title, Alan M.;
   Frank, Zoe A.; Lites, Bruce; Elmore, David
2007PASJ...59S.607K    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.1853K
  Vector magnetic fields of moving magnetic features (MMFs) were well
  observed with the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard the Hinode
  satellite. We focused on the evolution of three MMFs with the SOT in
  this study. We found that an MMF having relatively vertical fields
  with the same polarity as the sunspot was detached from the penumbra
  around the granules appearing in the outer penumbra. This suggests
  that granular motions in the outer penumbra are responsible for
  disintegration of the sunspot. Two MMFs with polarity opposite to
  the sunspot are located around the outer edge of horizontal fields
  extending from the penumbra. This is evidence that the MMFs with
  polarity opposite to the sunspot are the prolongation of penumbral
  horizontal fields. Redshifts larger than the sonic velocity in the
  photosphere are detected for some of the MMFs with polarity opposite
  to the sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Tale of Two Spicules: The Impact of Spicules on the Magnetic
    Chromosphere
Authors: de Pontieu, Bart; McIntosh, Scott; Hansteen, Viggo H.;
   Carlsson, Mats; Schrijver, Carolus J.; Tarbell, Theodore D.; Title,
   Alan M.; Shine, Richard A.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Nagata,
   Shin'ichi
2007PASJ...59S.655D    Altcode: 2007arXiv0710.2934D
  We use high-resolution observations of the Sun in CaIIH (3968Å)
  from the Solar Optical Telescope on Hinode to show that there are
  at least two types of spicules that dominate the structure of the
  magnetic solar chromosphere. Both types are tied to the relentless
  magnetoconvective driving in the photosphere, but have very different
  dynamic properties. “Type-I” spicules are driven by shock waves
  that form when global oscillations and convective flows leak into
  the upper atmosphere along magnetic field lines on 3--7minute
  timescales. “Type-II” spicules are much more dynamic: they form
  rapidly (in ∼ 10s), are very thin (≤ 200 km wide), have lifetimes
  of 10-150s (at any one height), and seem to be rapidly heated to
  (at least) transition region temperatures, sending material through
  the chromosphere at speeds of order 50--150kms<SUP>-1</SUP>. The
  properties of Type II spicules suggest a formation process that is
  a consequence of magnetic reconnection, typically in the vicinity
  of magnetic flux concentrations in plage and network. Both types of
  spicules are observed to carry Alfvén waves with significant amplitudes
  of order 20kms<SUP>-1</SUP>.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Correspondence between Moving Magnetic Features and
    Penumbral Magnetic Fields
Authors: Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.
2007ASPC..369..145K    Altcode:
  We investigate vector magnetic fields of moving magnetic features
  (MMFs) around a mature sunspot with the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter
  and SOHO/MDI. In addition to the classical isolated MMFs identified by
  visually inspecting the time sequence of MDI magnetograms, we focus
  on any diffuse moving magnetic features that are not recognized
  as classical MMFs. This feature is called non-isolated MMFs. The
  non-isolated MMFs occupy most of the moat region surrounding the
  sunspot, and have nearly horizontal magnetic fields with both
  polarities. We find that the isolated MMFs located on the lines
  extrapolated from the horizontal component of the penumbral uncombed
  structure have magnetic fields similar to the non-isolated MMFs. This
  suggests that such MMFs are part of horizontal fields extended from
  the penumbra. The isolated MMFs located on the lines extrapolated from
  the vertical component of the uncombed structure have vertical fields
  with polarity same as the sunspot. Our observation shows that such
  MMFs are detached from the vertical component of the penumbra. Their
  flux transport rate is estimated to be 1-3 times larger than a flux
  loss rate of the sunspot. The isolated vertical MMFs alone can be
  responsible for decaying the sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Estimate on SOT Light Level in Flight with Throughput
    Measurements in SOT Sun Tests
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kubo, M.; Tarbell, T. D.; Berger, T. E.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Miyashita, M.; Noguchi,
   M.; Nakagiri, M.; Tsuneta, S.; Elmore, D. F.; Lites, B. W.
2007ASPC..369...51S    Altcode:
  The SOT (Solar Optical Telescope, e.g., Shimizu 2004) optical
  system consists of 50cm-aperture optical telescope (OTA) and focal
  plane instrument (FPP). The solar light into the telescope penetrates
  through many optical elements located in OTA and FPP before illuminating
  CCDs. Natural solar light was fed to the integrated SOT in sun tests for
  verifying various optical aspects including the confirmation of photon
  throughput. CCD exposures provide the number of photons accumulated
  in an exposure duration with a clean-room test condition. To estimate
  the absolute intensity of the solar light at the telescope entrance
  in the clean-room test condition, we developed a pinhole-PSD sensor
  for simultaneous monitoring the solar light outside the clean room
  and measured the transmission of light through two flat mirrors of
  the heliostat and clean-room entrance window glass as a function of
  wavelength. The PSD sensor was pre-calibrated with continuous monitoring
  the solar light in a day long under a clear constant sky condition,
  determining the earth atmospheric attenuation and the PSD output for
  the solar light on orbit. These throughput measurements have provided
  an estimate on photon throughput for the SOT flight model. The results
  confirm suitable number of photons without saturation for proper CCD
  exposures in flight.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Supersonic Downflows in the Photosphere Discovered in Sunspot
    Moat Regions
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Martinez-Pillet, V.; Collados, M.; Ruiz-Cobo,
   B.; Centeno, R.; Beck, C.; Katsukawa, Y.
2007ASPC..369..113S    Altcode:
  This paper reports on our new findings from the International
  Time Program observations at the Canaries islands, Spain, in July
  2005. We have found small-scale photospheric events with extremely
  red-shifted Stokes V signals in sunspot moat regions. A preliminary
  estimate of the physical conditions for an observed Stokes V profile
  indicates the presence of a downward motion with a supersonic speed
  in the order of 10 km/s. With the currently evaluated observational
  information, we interprete the supersonic flows as downward motion from
  magnetic reconnection occurring at the upper chromosphere or lower
  photosphere. With coordinated observations of the Solar-B onboard
  telescopes, Stokes measurements by the SOT spectro-polarimeter would
  give new information for further understanding the nature of these
  events with strongly red-shifted Stokes V, and for discussing the
  physical conditions involving in possible magnetic reconnections in
  the lower solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Performance Characteristics of the Solar-B Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Elmore, D. F.; Streander, K. V.; Hoffmann,
   C. M.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.; Shine, R. A.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Shimizu, T.; Suematsu, Y.
2007ASPC..369...55L    Altcode:
  The Focal Plane Package (FPP) of the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT)
  includes the first precision Spectro-Polarimeter (SP) for solar space
  observations. The FPP/SP will provide high precision measures of
  the vector magnetic field in the solar photosphere. Here we present
  some as-built performance specifications for the entire system of
  telescope + polarimeter. The FPP-SP system represents significant
  gains in several aspects over existing spectro-polarimetric systems;
  notably, angular resolution, polarimetric accuracy, spectral purity,
  and most importantly, temporal continuity of stable, high angular
  resolution. In this short summary of the poster, a few of the
  performance characteristics of the SP are presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Calibration of the SOT Polarization
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Noguchi, M.; Nakagiri, M.; Miyashita, M.; Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T. D.;
   Shine, R. A.; Hoffmann, C. M.; Cruz, T.; Lites, B. W.; Elmore, D. F.
2007ASPC..369...39I    Altcode:
  Calibration of SOT polarization property was performed using natural
  sunlight and well calibrated sheet polarizer (linear and circular)
  placed on the entrance of the telescope. The polarimeter response
  matrices were determined for the spectropolarimeter (SP) and the
  narrowband filter imager (NFI), and it is shown that they are well
  behave as predicted and constant over the field of view. The crosstalk
  between I,Q,U,V will be suppressed to the negligible level at the
  photometric accuracy of 10^{-3} after the calibration with the obtained
  matrices. The sensitivity of SOT on linear and circular polarizations
  at each wavelength observed by NFI are also obtained.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Examinations of the Relative Alignment of the Instruments
    on SOT
Authors: Okamoto, T. J.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T. D.
2007ASPC..369...47O    Altcode:
  We report the results of the examination about the relative alignment
  among the instruments on SOT. We employ a test data set obtained in the
  natural sun-light test in May 2005, which has had a grid pattern over
  the entire FOV. SOT has the filtergraph (FG) and the spectro-polarimeter
  (SP). The FG consists of six broadband filter imagers (BFI) and six
  narrowband filter imagers (NFI). We examined the displacements among
  the images taken with different filters to an accuracy of better than
  0.1 pixel corresponding to 0.02”. It is important to know relative
  displacements and plate scales of these instruments for accurate
  alignment of observational data. We note that the values measured in
  our work are relative and it is needed to decide the absolute values
  with another way.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vector Spectropolarimetry of Dark-cored Penumbral Filaments
    with Hinode
Authors: Bellot Rubio, L. R.; Tsuneta, S.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Lites, B. W.; Nagata, S.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Suematsu,
   Y.; Tarbell, T. D.; Title, A. M.; del Toro Iniesta, J. C.
2007ApJ...668L..91B    Altcode: 2007arXiv0708.2791B
  We present spectropolarimetric measurements of dark-cored penumbral
  filaments taken with Hinode at a resolution of 0.3". Our observations
  demonstrate that dark-cored filaments are more prominent in polarized
  light than in continuum intensity. Far from disk center, the Stokes
  profiles emerging from these structures are very asymmetric and show
  evidence for magnetic fields of different inclinations along the
  line of sight, together with strong Evershed flows of at least 6-7 km
  s<SUP>-1</SUP>. In sunspots closer to disk center, dark-cored penumbral
  filaments exhibit regular Stokes profiles with little asymmetries due
  to the vanishing line-of-sight component of the horizontal Evershed
  flow. An inversion of the observed spectra indicates that the magnetic
  field is weaker and more inclined in the dark cores as compared with
  the surrounding bright structures. This is compatible with the idea
  that dark-cored filaments are the manifestation of flux tubes carrying
  hot Evershed flows.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Emergence of Small-Scale Magnetic Loops in the Quiet-Sun
    Internetwork
Authors: Centeno, R.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Lites, B.; Kubo, M.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.
2007ApJ...666L.137C    Altcode: 2007arXiv0708.0844C
  We study the emergence of magnetic flux at very small spatial
  scales (less than 2") in the quiet-Sun internetwork. To this aim,
  a time series of spectropolarimetric maps was taken at disk center
  using the instrument SP/SOT on board Hinode. The LTE inversion of
  the full Stokes vector measured in the Fe I 6301 and 6302 Å lines
  allows us to retrieve the magnetic flux and topology in the region
  of study. In the example presented here, the magnetic flux emerges
  within a granular structure. The horizontal magnetic field appears
  prior to any significant amount of vertical field. As time goes on,
  the traces of the horizontal field disappear, while the vertical dipoles
  drift-carried by the plasma motions-toward the surrounding intergranular
  lanes. These events take place within typical granulation timescales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Hinode (Solar-B) Mission: An Overview
Authors: Kosugi, T.; Matsuzaki, K.; Sakao, T.; Shimizu, T.; Sone,
   Y.; Tachikawa, S.; Hashimoto, T.; Minesugi, K.; Ohnishi, A.; Yamada,
   T.; Tsuneta, S.; Hara, H.; Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimojo, M.;
   Watanabe, T.; Shimada, S.; Davis, J. M.; Hill, L. D.; Owens, J. K.;
   Title, A. M.; Culhane, J. L.; Harra, L. K.; Doschek, G. A.; Golub, L.
2007SoPh..243....3K    Altcode:
  The Hinode satellite (formerly Solar-B) of the Japan Aerospace
  Exploration Agency's Institute of Space and Astronautical Science
  (ISAS/JAXA) was successfully launched in September 2006. As the
  successor to the Yohkoh mission, it aims to understand how magnetic
  energy gets transferred from the photosphere to the upper atmosphere
  and results in explosive energy releases. Hinode is an observatory
  style mission, with all the instruments being designed and built to
  work together to address the science aims. There are three instruments
  onboard: the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT), the EUV Imaging Spectrometer
  (EIS), and the X-Ray Telescope (XRT). This paper provides an overview
  of the mission, detailing the satellite, the scientific payload, and
  operations. It will conclude with discussions on how the international
  science community can participate in the analysis of the mission data.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Micro-jets Discovered Above Sunspot Penumbrae
Authors: Katsukawa, Yukio; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Shimizu, T.; Kubo, M.; Nagata, S.; Berger, T.; Tarbell, T.; Shine,
   R.; Title, A.
2007AAS...210.9413K    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..219K
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard HINODE allows us to observe
  dynamical activities in the solar photosphere and the chromosphere
  with high and stable image quality of 0.2 arcseconds. This superior
  performance of SOT provides new findings of fine-scale transient
  activities occurring in the chromosphere. In this paper, we report
  discovery of fine-scale jet-like phenomena ubiquitously observed
  above sunspot penumbrae. The jets are identified in image sequences
  of a sunspot taken through a Ca II H line filter at 3968A. The Ca II
  H line is sensitive to about 10^4 K plasma in the chromosphere. <P
  />Their length is typically between 3000 and 10000km, and their
  width is smaller than 500km. It is notable that their lifetime
  is shorter than 1 minute. Those small spatial and temporal scale
  possibly makes it difficult to identify the phenomena in existing
  ground-based observations. The jets are easily identified when a
  sunspot is located far from the disk center, and motion of the bright
  features suggests that mass is erupted from lower chromosphere to upper
  atmosphere. Velocities of the motion are estimated to be 50 to 100 km/s
  from their lateral motion of intensity patterns. The velocities are much
  faster than sound speeds in the chromosphere. A possible cause of such
  high-speed jets is magnetic reconnection at the lower chromosphere
  resulted from fluted magnetic configuration in penumbrae which is
  suggested by vector magnetic field measurements in the photosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode Data Calibration For Precise Image Co-alignment:
    XRT vs. SOT
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; DeLuca, E. E.; Lundquist, L.; Sakao,
   T.; Kubo, M.; Narukage, N.; Kano, R.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T.; Shine, D.; Hinode Team
2007AAS...210.9417S    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39Q.220S
  From late October in 2006, Hinode solar optical telescope (SOT) has
  started to produce series of 0.2-0.3 arcsec visible-light images,
  revealing dynamical behaviors of solar magnetic fields on the
  solar surface. Simultaneously, Hinode X-ray telescope (XRT) has been
  providing 1 arcsec resolution X-ray images of the solar corona, giving
  the location of heating and dynamics occuring in the corona. Precise
  image co-alignment of SOT data on XRT data with sub-arcsec accuracy is
  required to provide new information regarding connecting the corona to
  the photosphere. This presentation will give an introduction of Hinode
  between-telescopes' image co-alignment to SPD participants. For active
  region observations with sunspots, sunspots can be used as fiducial to
  co-align the data from the two telescopes each other. Satellite jitter
  in order of 1 arcsec or less is included in the series of XRT data,
  whereas image stabilization system (correlation tracker) removes the
  satellite jitter from the series of SOT images. Telescope pointings show
  orbital variation in order of a few arcsec, which can be well predicted
  from Hinode orbit information. Modeling co-alignment is under study
  and it is the only precise method for quiet Sun and limb observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Patches in Internetwork Quiet Sun
Authors: De Wijn, Alfred; Lites, B.; Berger, T.; Shine, R.; Title,
   A.; Katsukawa, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Hinode Team
2007AAS...210.9412D    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39Q.219D
  We study strong flux elements in the quiet sun in the context of
  the nature of quiet-sun magnetism, its coupling to chromospheric,
  transition-region and coronal fields, and the nature of a local
  turbulent dynamo. Strong, kilogauss flux elements show up intermittently
  as small bright points in G-band and Ca II H images. Although
  bright points have been extensively studied in the magnetic network,
  internetwork magnetism has only come under scrutiny in recent years. A
  full spectrum of field strengths seems to be ubiquitously present in
  the internetwork at small spatial scales, with the stronger elements
  residing in intergranular lanes. De Wijn et al. (2005) found that bright
  points in quiet sun internetwork areas appear recurrently with varying
  intensity and horizontal motion within long-lived patches that outline
  cell patterns on mesogranular scales. They estimate that the "magnetic
  patches" have a mean lifetime of nine hours, much longer than granular
  timescales. We use multi-hour sequences of G-band and Ca II H images
  as well as magnetograms recorded by the Hinode satellite to follow up
  on their results. The larger field of view, the longer sequences, the
  addition of magnetograms, and the absence of atmospheric seeing allows
  us to better constrain the patch lifetime, to provide much improved
  statistics on IBP lifetime, to compare IBPs to network bright points,
  and to study field polarity of IBPs in patches and between nearby
  patches. <P />Hinode is an international project supported by JAXA,
  NASA, PPARC and ESA. We are grateful to the Hinode team for all their
  efforts in the design, build and operation of the mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode/SOT Observations Of Apparent "Thermal Plume" Motions
    In A Solar Prominence
Authors: Berger, Thomas; Tarbell, T.; Slater, G.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Kubo, M.;
   Nagata, S.
2007AAS...210.9433B    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..222B
  We present 396.8 nm Ca II H-line observations of a large
  hedgerow, or "sheet", prominence seen on the solar western limb
  on 30-November-2006. The 16 second cadence observations show dark
  channels rising vertically at speeds of approximately 10 km/sec to
  heights of about 15 Mm above the limb. Many of the motions end in
  vortical overturning near the top of the sheet . Bright downflows of
  similar speed are also seen within the sheet, often in association
  with a dark channel that has risen to the top of the sheet. The dark
  channels are suggestive of hot material rising in thermal plumes
  within the prominence sheet. Similarly, the bright material motions
  appear to be density enhanced regions of turbulent downflow. Current
  models of sheet prominences do not include the observed dynamics. In
  these models, the prominence plasma is in a low-beta state and is
  constrained to move only along magnetic field lines. However the
  motions observed here are extremely complex, implying either that the
  magnetic field lines are undergoing turbulent motion, thus tangling
  and reconnecting constantly, or that the plasma is not constrained
  by the field and is in a high-beta convective state. We measure the
  motion of several representative "plumes" and downflows, estimate the
  density and temperature of the prominence plasma, and suggest several
  avenues for further investigation. <P />This work was supported by
  NASA under the Hinode/SOT contract NNM07AA01C.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Observation of Spicules in Ca II H with
    Hinode/SOT
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Okamoto, T.; Nagata, S.; Shimizu, T.; Tarbell, T.; Shine, R.; Title, A.
2007AAS...210.9411S    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..219S
  High cadence observation with a Ca II H broadband filtergraph
  (passband of 0.25 nm) of the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) aboard
  HINODE has revealed dynamical nature of solar limb spicules. Thanks to a
  diffraction-limited and low-scattered light property of the instrument,
  we can track the detailed evolution of individual spicules for the first
  time with a spatial resolution of 0.2 arcsec. The spicules in Ca II
  H are typically several arcsec tall and have multi-thread structure;
  each threads are a few tenth of arcsec wide. It should be stressed
  that most spicules do not show a simple up-and-down motion along a
  rigid path line. They start with bright structure emanating from Ca II
  H bright region, get widen and diffused with time and ascent, showing
  expansion with lateral or even helical motion in tall events. Small and
  short lived spicules tend to fade out after ascent. We will present
  new findings of spicule dynamics in different magnetic environments
  and discuss about long standing controversy of its motion and evolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode/SOT Observation of Fine Structure of the Evershed Flow
Authors: Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Shimojo, M.; Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title,
   A.; Lites, B.; Elmore, D.; Yokoyama, T.; Nagaka, S.
2007AAS...210.9408I    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..218I
  Small scale structure of the Evershed effect was studied using the
  Spectropolarimeter (SP) and Broadband Filter Imager (BFI) of SOT aboard
  Hinode. SP maps and high cadence continuum images of BFI coverting
  entire sunspots are used to investigate the spatial distribution of
  the flow field, brightness and magnetic fields. It is revealed that the
  Evershed flow starts at the front edge of inwardly migrating penumbral
  grains with an upward velocity component and turns to nearly holizontal
  flow preferentially in dark lanes (or dark core of filaments) of the
  penumbra. Our results are in general agreement with the well known
  uncombed penumbral concept in which the Evershed flow takes place
  in nearly holizontal field channels. We discovered a number of tiny
  elongated regions in deep photosphere in which there is an obvious
  upward motion of 1-1.5km/s distributing over the penumbra. <P />They
  could be identified as the 'foot points' of the individual Evershed
  flow channels. Cross-correlation among the flow speed, intensity,
  magnetic field strength and inclination, and distribution of string
  down flows in and around the penumbra will also be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Continuous Upflow of Plasmas at the Edge of an Active Region
    as Revealed by the X-ray Telescope (XRT) aboard Hinode
Authors: Sakao, Taro; Kano, R.; Narukage, N.; Kotoku, J.; Bando, T.;
   DeLuca, E. E.; Lundquist, L. L.; Golub, L.; Kubo, M.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Hara, H.; Matsuzaki, K.; Shimojo, M.; Shibasaki, K.;
   Shimizu, T.; Nakatani, I.
2007AAS...210.7205S    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39Q.179S
  We present X-ray imaging observations with Hinode X-Ray Telescope (XRT)
  of an active region NOAA AR 10942 made in the period of 20-22 February
  2007. A prominent feature that drew our particular attention is that
  there revealed continuous upflow of soft-X-ray-emitting plasmas along
  apparently-open field lines towards the outer corona emanating from the
  edge of the active region. <P />The field lines are originated from
  an ensamble of small spots of following polarity, and are located at
  a border between the active region and an adjacent equatorial coronal
  hole(s) located to the east. The upflow was observed to be continuous
  throughout the three days of observation intervals with projected
  velocity of 140 km/s, accompanied with undulating motion of the field
  lines. <P />We assert that these upflowing plasmas would be a possible
  source of slow solar wind material, which supports a foresighted
  notion which grew out of interplanetary scintillation observations
  that slow solar wind most likely has its origin in the vicinity of
  active regions with large flux expansion (Kojima et al. 1999). <P />A
  preliminaty analysis indicates that the temperature of the upflowing
  material near the base of the field lines is 1.3 MK with number density
  of 2 × 10<SUP>9 </SUP>/cm<SUP>3</SUP>. Assuming that all the material
  is to escape to the interplanetary space, this leads to a mass loss
  rate of 2 × 10<SUP>11</SUP> g/s which amounts to a good fraction of
  the total mass loss rate for solar wind. It is noteworthy that, even
  apart from this unique upflow, we see continuous (up)flows of plasmas
  anywhere around (surrounding) the active region. <P />Details of the
  upflow will be presented and their possible implication to slow solar
  wind discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Flux Emergence In The Quiet Sun Photosphere
Authors: Centeno, Rebecca; Lites, B.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Suematsu, Y.; Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.
2007AAS...210.9406C    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..218C
  We study the emergence of magnetic flux at very small spacial scales
  (less than 1 arcsec) in the quiet Sun internetwork. To this aim, several
  time series of spectropolarimetric maps were taken at disk center using
  the instrument SP/SOT on board Hinode. The LTE inversion of the full
  Stokes vector measured in the Fe I 6301 and 6302 lines will allow us
  to retrieve the magnetic flux and topology in the region of study. We
  find that the magnetic flux emerges typically within the granular
  structures. In many cases, the horizontal magnetic field appears
  prior to any significant amount of vertical field. As time goes on,
  the traces of the horizontal field dissapear while the the vertical
  dipoles drift -carried by the plasma motions- towards the surrounding
  intergranular lanes. Sometimes they stay trapped there for a while
  but they eventually either disappear by disgregation/cancelation
  or agregate to other magnetic field concentrations giving rise to
  larger flux elements. The time scale of these events is of the order
  of 10-20 minutes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Formation of Moving Magnetic Features and Penumbral Magnetic
    Fields
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, S.;
   Suematsu, Y.; Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata, S.; Lites, B. W.; Frank, Z.;
   Tarbell, T. D.; Shine, R. A.; Title, A. M.
2007AAS...210.9410K    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..218K
  We investigate the formation process of Moving Magnetic Features
  (MMFs) observed with Hinode/SOT. Moving magnetic features are small
  magnetic elements moving outward in the moat region surrounding
  mature sunspots. We derive vector magnetic fields of MMFs around
  simple sunspots near the disk center. Most of MMFs with polarity
  opposite to the sunspot have large redshift around the penumbral outer
  boundary. We find that some of them have Doppler velocities of about
  10 km/s and such large Doppler motion is observed only in the Stokes
  V profile. The Stokes Q and U profiles in the same pixel do not have
  any significant Doppler motions. Horizontal magnetic fields of the
  penumbra frequently extend to the moat region and the MMFs having
  horizontal fields with polarity same as the sunspot are formed. The
  MMFs with polarity opposite to the sunspot appear around the outer
  edge of the extending penumbral fields. We also find penumbral spines,
  which have more vertical magnetic fields than the surroundings, branch
  off at their outer edge and MMFs having relatively vertical fields
  with polarity same as the sunspot are detached from the outer edge
  of the branch. The branch of penumbral spine is formed when granular
  cells in the moat region go into the penumbra.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ubiquitous Horizontal Magnetic Fields in the Quiet Solar
    Photosphere as Revealed by HINODE Meaurements
Authors: Lites, Bruce W.; Socas Navarro, H.; Berger, T.; Frank,
   Z.; Shine, R.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa,
   Y.; Tsuneta, S.; Suematsu, Y.; Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.;
   Hinode Team
2007AAS...210.6303L    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..171L
  Measurements with the HINODE Spectro-Polarimeter (SP) of the quiet
  Sun allow characterization of the weak, mixed-polarity magnetic
  flux at the highest angular resolution to date (0.3"), and with good
  polarimetric sensitivity(0.025% relative to the continuum). The image
  stabilization of the HINODE spacecraft allows long integrations with
  degradation of the image quality only by the evolution of the solar
  granulation. From the Stokes V profile measurements we find an average
  solar "Apparent Flux Density" of 14 Mx cm-2, with significant Stokes V
  signals at every position on the disk at all times. However, there are
  patches of meso-granular size (5-15") where the flux is very weak. At
  this high sensitivity, transverse fields produce measurable Stokes
  Q,U linear polarization signals over a majority of the area, with
  apparent transverse flux densities in the internetwork significantly
  larger than the corresponding longitudinal flux densities. When viewed
  at the center of the solar disk, the Stokes V signals (longitudinal
  fields) show a preference for occurrence in the intergranular lanes,
  and the Q,U signals occur preferably over the granule interiors,
  but neither association is exclusive. <P />Hinode is an international
  project supported by JAXA, NASA, PPARC and ESA. We are grateful to the
  Hinode team for all their efforts in the design, build and operation
  of the mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Attempt to detect Aflven waves with Solar Optical Telescope
    aboard Hinode
Authors: Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Lites, B.; Shine, D.;
   Tarbell, T.; Title, A.
2007AAS...210.9428T    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..222T
  Flux tube on the sun may carry linear and torsional Alfven waves
  generated by photospheric motion. Photospheric motion of 2 km/s would
  provide magnetic fluctuation of 40G for 1KG tube and for the Alfven
  speed of 50km/s. This may be close to the detection limit of the Stokes
  Q and U signals for flux tubes located in the sun center. However,
  for flux tubes located near the limb, the fluctuation would be seen in
  the Stokes V signal, and can be detectable. <P />We also may be able
  to confirm the 90 degree phase shift between magnetic fluctuation and
  velocity fluctuation, which is easier to observe for flux tubes near
  the limb. Detection of waves would be important in terms of coronal
  heating and solar wind acceleration. An attempt to detect waves along
  flux tubes will be reported.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Discovery Of Cool Cloud-like Structures In The Corona With
    Hinode Solar Optical Telescope
Authors: Okamoto, Takenori; Tsuneta, S.; Katsukawa, Y.; Ichimoto,
   K.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Nagata, S.; Shibata, K.; Tarbell, T.;
   Shine, R.; Berger, T.; Lites, B.; Myers, D.
2007AAS...210.9426O    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..221O
  A solar observation satellite Hinode (Japanese for sun rise) was
  launched in September 2006.Hinode carried 3 advanced solar telescopes,
  visible light telescope, EUV imaging spectrometer, and X-ray telescope
  to simultaneously observe the photosphere, chromosphere, transition
  region, and corona. In the performance verification phase of the Hinode
  spacecraft with its telescopes, we observed an active region AR10921
  near the west limb of the solar disk on November 9 2006. At this point,
  we planned to observe spicules on the limb with a broadband filter
  dedicated to Ca II H line (3968A). Ca II-H emission line (3968A) comes
  from plasma with temperature of approx. 10(4) K, which is much lower
  than the coronal temperature of 10(6-7) K. In addition to spectacular
  spicules, we find a large cloud-like structure located 10,000-20,000
  km above the limb. The cloud has a very complex fine structure with
  dominant horizontal thread-like structure. Some features are moving
  horizontally and also have clear vertical oscillatory motions. The
  periods and amplitudes of these oscillations are 130-250 seconds and
  200-850 km, respectively. The vertical oscillatory motion sometimes
  has a coherence length as long as 16,000 km. We conclude that from
  various observational features this vertical oscillation is a signature
  of Alfven waves propagating along the horizontal magnetic fields. We
  will discuss their origin and implications.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hinode/SOT Observations of Sunspot Penumbral Dynamics and
    Evolution
Authors: Shine, Richard A.; Hagenaar, M.; Tarbell, T.; Title, A.;
   Lites, B.; Ichimoto, K.; Tsuneta, S.; Katsakawa, Y.; Suematsu, Y.;
   Nagata, S.; Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.
2007AAS...210.9407S    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..218S
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) on the Hinode satellite (launched
  October 2006) has obtained long and nearly continuous time series of
  several large sunspots including those in NOAA AR's 10923, 10925,
  and 10930. Here we use high resolution movies taken primarily with
  the broad band Ca II (396.8nm) and G band (430.5nm) channels and
  magnetograms taken with the 630.2nm narrow band channel to study
  the details and short term evolution of penumbral fine structures
  as well as the long term evolution of the sunspots. We compute flow
  maps and use space/time slices to track motions of Evershed clouds,
  penumbral grains, and visualize oscillations. The data contain examples
  of penumbral formation and disintegration including "orphan" penumbra
  (i.e., penumbra without an obvious umbra). There is also an interesting
  instance of "colliding" penumbra in AR 10930 as two sunspots of opposite
  polarity converged. The zone of apparent shear was associated with
  several flares. <P />This work was supported by NASA contract NNM07AA01C

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical Performance of the Solar Optical Telescope aboard
    HINODE
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, K.; Katsukawa, Y.; Otsubo,
   M.; Tsuneta, S.; Nakagiri, M.; Noguchi, M.; Tamura, T.; Kato, Y.;
   Hara, H.; Miyashita, M.; Shimizu, T.; Kubo, M.; Sakamoto, Y.
2007AAS...210.9402S    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39Q.217S
  The Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) carried by HINODE was designed
  to perform a high-precision polarimetric observation of the Sun
  in visible light spectra with a spatial resolution of 0.2 - 0.3
  arcseconds. The SOT is a sophistcated instrument and consists of two
  separate optical parts; the Optical Telescope Assembly (OTA) which is
  50 cm aperture Gregorian telescope feeding the light into following
  observing instruments which is called the focal plane package (FPP)
  made of two filtergraphs and a spectro-polarimeter. The performance
  of the OTA is important because a spatial resolution and its temporal
  stability is mainly determined by this component. To keep the OTA in
  moderate temperature and optical thermal deformation small, it equipped
  newly designed components such as a heat dump and a secondary field stop
  aluminum mirror with high reflectivity silver coating and a temperature
  low-sensitive apochromatic collimataing lens unit with a UV/IR cut
  coating on the first surface. In addition, the SOT has an active image
  stabilization system consisting of correlation tracker, tip-tilt mirror
  and its controller against satellite pointing jitter. It was confirmed
  that this system freezes residual motion to the 0.01 arcsecond level
  on orbit. The image of sub-arcsecond G-band (430.5 nm) bright points
  clearly indicates that the SOT achieves the diffraction-limit on orbit;
  this is also confirmed using a phase diversity method. In this paper,
  we describe details of the design and on-orbit performance of the OTA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Landscape Of Solar Polar Region With Solar Optical
    Telescope Aboard Hinode
Authors: Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Y.; Ichimoto, K.; Shimizu, T.;
   Katsukawa, Y.; Nagata, S.; Orozco Suárez, D.; Lites, B.; Shine, D.;
   Tarbell, T.; Title, A.
2007AAS...210.9405T    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..218T
  Solar polar region is the final destination for remnant magnetic
  fields due to meridional flow and granular diffusion, and is very
  important for the global solar dynamo. Hinode satellite carried out
  high-resolution spectro-polarimetric observations for the Northern
  pole on 2006 November 22 as a part of its performance verification
  program. We find ubiquitous isolated (positive and negative) patches
  in the Stokes V map (i.e. fields horizontal to local surface) all over
  the Arctic circle. The Q (vertical to local surface) map indicates
  scattered vertical flux tubes, which have bipolar feature in the U and
  V maps. This suggests canopy-like structure of the strong isolated flux
  tubes. This will be compared with equatorial landscape with similar
  distance from the sun center. Strong flux tube and weaker ubiquitous
  horizontal fields as represented by Stokes V would have implication
  to the current understanding of the global and local dynamo.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vector Magnetic Fields of Moving Magnetic Features and Flux
    Removal from a Sunspot
Authors: Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, S.
2007ApJ...659..812K    Altcode:
  Moving magnetic features (MMFs) are small photospheric magnetic
  elements moving outward in the zone (moat region) surrounding mature
  sunspots. Vector magnetic fields and horizontal motion of the classical
  MMFs (called isolated MMFs hereafter) are investigated using coordinated
  ASP and MDI observations. Their magnetic and velocity properties
  are compared to nearby magnetic features, including moat fields
  surrounding the isolated MMFs and penumbral uncombed structure. The
  moat fields are defined as nonisolated MMFs because they also move
  outward from sunspots. The nonisolated MMFs have nearly horizontal
  magnetic fields of both polarities. We find that the isolated MMFs
  located on the lines extrapolated from the horizontal component of the
  uncombed structure have magnetic fields similar to the nonisolated
  MMFs. This suggests that the MMFs with nearly horizontal fields are
  intersections of horizontal fields extended from the penumbra with the
  photospheric surface. We find clear evidence that the isolated MMFs
  located on the lines extrapolated from the vertical component of the
  uncombed structure have vertical field lines with polarity same as the
  sunspot. This correspondence shows that such MMFs are detached from
  the spine (vertical) component of the penumbra. We estimate that the
  magnetic flux carried by the vertical MMFs is about 1-3 times larger
  than the flux loss of the sunspot. We suggest that the isolated vertical
  MMFs alone can transport sufficient magnetic flux and are responsible
  for the disappearance and disintegration of the sunspot.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Field Diagnostic Capability of Solar-B/SOT:
    Filtergraph Instrument
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Suematsu, Y.; Shimizu, T.; Katsukawa, Y.;
   Tsuneta, S.; Tarbell, T. D.; Shine, R. A.; Hoffmann, C. M.; Title,
   A. M.; Lites, B. W.; Elmore, D. F.; Streander, K. V.
2006ASPC..358..189I    Altcode:
  The Narrowband Filter Instrument (NFI) of the Solar Optical Telescope
  onboard Solar-B provides 2D magnetograms/Dopplergrams with a tunable
  Lyot filter (width ∼ 0.1 Å) in 6 selected wavelength bands, and
  spatial sampling of 0.08 arcsec/px. The Zeeman-effect sensitivity of
  NFI and the detection limits of weak magnetic fields are evaluated for
  2 photospheric and 3 chromospheric lines. Magnetic-field retrievability
  from the NFI observables is studied using synthetic Stokes profiles
  of Fe I 5250 Å. We find that, with optimized wavelength sampling at 4
  positions, the inferred magnetic field is sufficiently accurate under
  the hypothesis of constant magnetic field and velocity along the LOS.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Adiabatic expansion acceleration process in spontaneous fast
    magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.
2006AdSpR..37.1283S    Altcode:
  MHD study for the adiabatic expansion acceleration process associated
  with the spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection is reported. When
  the fast reconnection process steadily generates a plasmoid in the
  downstream, the adiabatic expansion acceleration region appears
  between the reconnection jet and plasmoid. It is pointed out that
  the appearance of the acceleration region is required to steadily
  keep the reconnection process. The reconnection jet and plasmoid is
  generally high beta but the plasma pressure in the acceleration region
  is extremely low, when the reconnection jet is supersonic. This feature
  may become a signature to detect where the Petschek reconnection is
  steadily caused in the current sheet of the geomagnetotail.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three dimensional computer simulation of magnetic loop
    associated with magnetic reconnection
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2006AdSpR..37.1301K    Altcode:
  The dynamics of large-scale magnetic loop in three dimensions is
  studied by MHD simulations. The spontaneous fast reconnection model
  is used in this study. Once a current-driven anomalous resistivity is
  ignited in a local region in a current sheet, the fast reconnection
  mechanism spontaneously evolves. As a result, large magnetic loop is
  developed, and very localized high pressure region appears outside of
  the magnetic loop. Near the region between magnetic loop and the high
  pressure region, very large vortex flow appears, and then, the high
  pressure region more and more localized due to this vortex. On the other
  hand, we suggest that the spatial size of initial disturbance to the
  direction of current is very important to evolve of three dimensional
  fast reconnection processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three Dimensional Analysis of Shock Structure around Magnetic
    Loop Associated with Spontaneous Fast Magnetic Reconnection
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2005ESASP.596E..72K    Altcode: 2005ccmf.confE..72K
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD Shock Wave Structure in Supersonic Magnetic Reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Kondo, K.; Ugai, M.
2005ESASP.596E..25S    Altcode: 2005ccmf.confE..25S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A long-time chopper for direct measurement of
    <SUP>4</SUP>He(<SUP>12</SUP>C,<SUP>16</SUP>O)γ reaction cross section
Authors: Oba, H.; Sagara, K.; Shimizu, T.; Oshiro, M.; Maeda, T.;
   Ikeda, N.
2005NuPhA.758..407O    Altcode:
  Direct measurement of the
  <SUP>4</SUP>He(<SUP>12</SUP>C,<SUP>16</SUP>O)γ reaction cross
  section by detecting <SUP>16</SUP>O recoils is in progress at
  Kyushu University tandem laboratory (KUTL). A long-time chopper
  (LTC) has been developed to reject backgrounds from <SUP>16</SUP>O
  recoils which have time (energy) spread. In the measurement of
  <SUP>4</SUP>He(<SUP>12</SUP>C,<SUP>16</SUP>O)γ cross section at
  E<SUB>cm</SUB> = 2.4 MeV, LTC was found to reduce the backgrounds by
  about three orders of magnitude.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Contamination evaluation and thermal vacuum bakeout for
    SOLAR-B visible-light and X-ray telescope
Authors: Tamura, Tomonori; Hara, Hirohisa; Tsuneta, Saku; Ichimoto,
   Kiyoshi; Kumagai, Kazuyoshi; Nakagiri, Masao; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Sakao, Taro; Kano, Ryouhei
2005RNAOJ...8...21T    Altcode:
  In the development of space telescopes, we are concerned about molecular
  outgassing materials from telescope components. In particular, for
  solar telescopes in space, the deposition of the outgassing materials
  may lead to the increase of solar absorptance at a mirror surface
  and it causes the thermal distortion due to the resultant temperature
  increase. The mirror reflectivity at vacuum ultraviolet wavelengths
  is very sensitive to molecular contamination. We have extensively
  evaluated reflectance at 121.6nm (Lyman-alpha) of the contamination
  witness mirrors exposed to the telescope testing environments in the
  SOLAR-B visible-light telescope program. Thermal vacuum bakeout of
  flight components is very effective process to reduce the outgassing
  rate. We have severe contamination control program during the assembly
  and testing of the SOLAR-B telescope up to launch of the satellite.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Completion of Solar-B/Optical Telescope flight model
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyosi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Otsubo, Masashi; Nakagiri, Masao; Noguchi, Motokazu; Tamura, Tomonori;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Kato, Yoshihiro; Hara, Hirohisa; Miyashita, Masakuni;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Kubo, Masahito; Sakamoto, Yasushi
2005ARAOJ...7...52S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Supersonic and Subsonic Expansion Acceleration Mechanisms in
    Fast Magnetic Reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2005fmpp.conf..139S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar-B/Optical Telescope flight model is coming up
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Otsubo, Masashi; Nakagiri, Masao; Noguchi, Motokazu; Tamura, Tomonori;
   Kato, Yoshihiro; Hara, Hirohisa; Miyashita, Masakuni; Tsuneta, Saku;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo, Masahito; Sakamoto, Yasushi
2005naoj.book....4S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Computer Simulations on the Spontaneous Fast Reconnection
    Evolution in Three Dimensions
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2005fmpp.conf..135K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The first build-up of the Solar-B flight models
Authors: Hara, Hirohisa; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Otsubo, Masashi; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Kato, Yoshihiro; Kano, Ryohei; Kumagai, Kazuyoshi; Shibasaki,
   Kiyoto; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Shimojo, Masumi; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Tamura, Tomonori; Tsuneta, Saku; Noguchi, Motokazu; Nakagiri, Masao;
   Miyashita, Masakuni; Watanabe, Tesuya; Kosuchi, Takeo; Sakao, Taro;
   Matsuzaki, Keiichi; Kitakoshi, Yasunori; Kubo, Masahito; Sakamoto,
   Yasushi
2005ARAOJ...7...46H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vector Magnetic Field of Moving Magnetic Features around a
    Well-Developed Sunspot
Authors: Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.
2004ASPC..325..143K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: SolarB Solar Optical Telescope (SOT)
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2004ASPC..325....3S    Altcode:
  The SolarB Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) will be the largest telescope
  with highest performance ever to observe the Sun at visible wavelengths
  from space. The telescope itself (Optical Telescope Assembly, OTA)
  along with its focal plane package (FPP), is optimized for measurement
  of the vector magnetic field and associated dynamics in the solar
  photosphere and chromosphere. FPP observations are controlled using
  commands from the sequence tables in Mission Data Processor (MDP). This
  paper describes scientific capabilities of the instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Test particle simulation of MHD shock structure in fast
    magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2004AGUFMSM53B0411S    Altcode:
  Test fluid particles are traced on the time-developed MHD simulation
  field data, in order to study MHD shock waves formed in fast
  magnetic reconnection. In general, when fast magnetic reconnection is
  steadily caused in the uniform current sheet, high speed plasma jet
  is generated by a pair of slow shocks and a plasmoid is formed in the
  downstream. According to our MHD simulations, when the plasmoid continue
  to propagate in the current sheet, the slow shock may be separated into
  two regions, i.e. reconnection jet region and plasmoid region. The
  reconnection jet is generated by the former slow shock. While, the
  propagation of the plasmoid is driven by the latter slow shock around
  the plasmoid. In addition, if the reconnection jet is supersonic,
  the slow shock in the jet region partially collapses, and then,
  intermediate waves and expansion waves appear in the jet region. The
  details of these MHD wave structures which are new features for the
  fast magnetic reconnection on the basis of MHD theory are reported by
  using test particle simulation technique.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Image stabilization system on SOLAR-B Solar Optical Telescope
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Edwards, Chris;
   Tarbell, Theodore; Kashiwagi, Yasuhiro; Kodeki, Kazuhide; Ito,
   Osamu; Miyagawa, Hiroyuki; Nagase, Masayuki; Inoue, Syunsaku; Kaneko,
   Kazumasa; Sakamoto, Yasushi; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Tsuneta, Saku; Miki,
   Shiro; Endo, Makoto; Tabata, Masaki; Nakaoji, Toshitaka; Matsuzaki,
   Keiichi; Kobayashi, Ken; Otsubo, Masashi; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Kumagai,
   Kazuyoshi; Noguchi, Motokazu; Tamura, Tomonori; Nakagiri, Masao
2004SPIE.5487.1199S    Altcode:
  Extremely stable pointing of the telescope is required for images on the
  CCD cameras to accurately measure the nature of magnetic field on the
  sun. An image stabilization system is installed to the Solar Optical
  Telescope onboard SOLAR-B, which stabilizes images on the focal plane
  CCD detectors in the frequency range lower than about 20Hz. The system
  consists of a correlation tracker and a piezo-based tip-tilt mirror with
  servo control electronics. The correlation tracker is a high speed CCD
  camera with a correlation algorithm on the flight computer, producing
  a pointing error from series of solar granule images. Servo control
  electronics drives three piezo actuators in the tip-tilt mirror. A
  unique function in the servo control electronics can put sine wave
  form signals in the servo loop, allowing us to diagnose the transfer
  function of the servo loop even on orbit. The image stabilization
  system has been jointly developed by collaboration of National
  Astronomical Observatory of Japan/Mitsubishi Electronic Corp. and
  Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center Solar and Astrophysics
  Laboratory. Flight model was fabricated in summer 2003, and we measured
  the system performance of the flight model on a laboratory environment
  in September 2003, confirming that the servo stability within 0-20 Hz
  bandwidth is 0.001-0.002 arcsec rms level on the sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Optical Telescope onboard the Solar-B
Authors: Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Tsuneta, Saku; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Otsubo, Masashi; Kato, Yoshihiro; Noguchi,
   Motokazu; Nakagiri, Masao; Tamura, Tomonori; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kubo,
   Masahito; Sakamoto, Yasushi; Hara, Hirohisa; Minesugi, Kenji; Ohnishi,
   Akira; Saito, Hideo; Kawaguchi, Noboru; Matsushita, Tadashi; Nakaoji,
   Toshitaka; Nagae, Kazuhiro; Sakamoto, Joji; Hasuyama, Yoshihiro;
   Mikami, Izumi; Miyawaki, Keizo; Sakurai, Yasushi; Kaido, Nobuaki;
   Horiuchi, Toshihida; Shimada, Sadanori; Inoue, Toshio; Mitsutake,
   Masaaki; Yoshida, Norimasa; Takahara, Osamu; Takeyama, Norihide;
   Suzuki, Masaharu; Abe, Shunichi
2004SPIE.5487.1142I    Altcode:
  The solar optical telescope onboard the Solar-B is aimed to perform a
  high precision polarization measurements of the solar spectral lines
  in visible wavelengths to obtain, for the first time, continuous
  sets of high spatial resolution (~0.2arcsec) and high accuracy
  vector-magnetic-field map of the sun for studying the mechanisms
  driving the fascinating activity phenomena occurring in the solar
  atmosphere. The optical telescope assembly (OTA) is a diffraction
  limited, aplanatic Gregorian telescope with an aperture of Φ500mm. With
  a collimating lens unit and an active folding mirror, the OTA provides
  a pointing-stabilized parallel beam to the focal plane package (FPP)
  with a field of view of about 360x200arcsec. In this paper we identify
  the key technical issues of OTA for achieving the mission goal and
  describe the basic concepts in its optical, mechanical and thermal
  designs. The strategy to verify the in-orbit performance of the
  telescope is also discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design and Performance of Tip-Tilt Mirror System for Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Kodeki, Kazuhide; Fukushima, Kazuhiko; Hara, Hirohisa; Inoue,
   Masao; Kano, Ryouhei; Kashiwase, Toshio; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Sakao,
   Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida, Tsuyoshi
2004JSpRo..41..868K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The dynamics of plasmoid in asymmetric spontaneous fast
    reconnection
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2004AdSpR..33..794K    Altcode:
  The spontaneous fast reconnection evolution is studied in asymmetric
  magnetic field configuration. In particular, it is investigated how
  shear flow influences in magnetosheath region to the propagation of
  plasmoid results from magnetic reconnection using two-dimensional
  magnetohydrodynamic simulations. According to the fast reconnection
  development, the resulting large-scale plasmoids swell and
  propagate. Once the plasmoid fully develops, the propagation speed
  becomes almost constant in both the symmetric and asymmetric magnetic
  field configuration. An asymmetric plasmoid swells predominantly
  in the region of a weaker magnetic field and propagates along the
  field lines. The associated shock structure standing at the plasma
  boundary is the ordinary slow shock irrespective of the intensity of
  shear flow. However, velocity of plasmoid is proportional to shear
  flow velocity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-wavelength observations of microflares and emerging
    flux with YOHKOH/SXT
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
2004IAUS..223..345S    Altcode: 2005IAUS..223..345S
  Soft X-ray observations by Yohkoh SXT have revealed that transient
  brightenings of small coronal loops frequently occur in active
  regions. Their estimated energy is 10^{24} sim 10^{28} ergs and
  non-thermal behaviors may be observed in the large member of
  the brightenings. They are considered as soft X-ray signatures of
  microflares observed in hard X-rays. Lower coronal temperature plasma
  (1-2MK) produced by Yohkoh transient brightenings is simultaneously
  observed in EUV wavelengths by TRACE and SoHO EIT/CDS. Moreover, EUV
  observations have shown a lot of tinier transient brightenings without
  accompanying SXT transient brightenings. Coordinated observations with
  photospheric observations show that the location of Yohkoh transient
  brightenings is well localized in active regions, i.e., in emerging flux
  regions, around well-developed sunspots, and in the coronal bundles
  connecting the leading plage to the following plage regions. In
  some Yohkoh events, small-scale emergence of magnetic flux is well
  associated with their occurrence, suggesting that emerging flux plays
  a key role in triggering transient energy release in the corona. This
  paper reviews multi-wavelength observations coordinated with Yohkoh SXT
  observations for investigating the nature of SXT transient brightenings
  (SXR microflares) and their associated emerging flux. Finally, Solar-B
  space observatory is briefly introduced as a next powerful tool for
  multi-wavelength investigations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Core-Collapse Supernovae Induced by Anisotropic Neutrino
    Radiation
Authors: Motizuki, Y.; Madokoro, H.; Shimizu, T.
2004EAS....11..163M    Altcode: 2004astro.ph..6303M
  We demonstrate the important role of anisotropic neutrino radiation
  on the mechanism of core-collapse supernova explosions. Through a
  newparameter study with a fixed radiation field of neutrinos, we
  show thatprolate explosions caused by globally anisotropic neutrino
  radiationrepresent the most effective mechanism of increasing the
  explosionenergy when the total neutrino luminosity is given. This is
  suggestive ofthe fact that the expanding materials of SN 1987A have
  a prolategeometry.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Comparison of supersonic and subsonic expansion accelerations
    associated with fast magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2004AdSpR..33..789S    Altcode:
  Supersonic and subsonic expansion acceleration mechanisms associated
  with spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection process are compared by
  two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations and test fluid
  (non-charged) particle simulations. When the Petschek reconnection
  process is steadily established, the reconnection jet generated by
  a pair of slow shocks becomes either supersonic (Case 1) or subsonic
  (Case 2), depending on the upstream plasma condition. For Case 1, the
  jet generated by the slow shocks can be further accelerated by the
  adiabatic supersonic expansion process. Finally, the jet encounters
  a fast shock in front of the plasmoid. For Case 2, the jet generated
  by slow shocks can be further accelerated by the adiabatic subsonic
  expansion process. The acceleration of Case 1 is stronger than that
  of Case 2. In Case 2, a fast shock is not formed. In both cases, it is
  important that the propagation of the plasmoid is driven by slow shocks
  formed around the plasmoid itself, rather than the reconnection jet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasmoid Formation and Heating in Supersonic and Subsonic
    Reconnections
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2004cosp...35..567S    Altcode: 2004cosp.meet..567S
  The supersonic and subsonic magnetic reconnections in the closed
  boundary system were studied in MHD simulations. Theoretically, when
  the upstream magnetic field region is high beta (i.e. larger than
  0.5), the reconnection jet is subsonic. Nevertheless, the jet can
  be temporally supersonic, i.e. superfast, in the stationary frame,
  when the jet region is sufficiently long. As a result, a fast shock
  is formed in front of the plasmoid. This is caused by the plasmoid
  (plasma loop) propagation. The fast shock is much weaker than that
  of supersonic magnetic reconnection. The differences between the
  supersonic and subsonic reconnections are discussed in the view of
  plasma acceleration and heating.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The evoluton of vector magnetic fields in an emerging flux
    region
Authors: Kubo, Masahito; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Lites,
   B. W.
2004naoj.book...41K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Digestive enzyme expression and epithelial structure of small
    intestine in neonatal rats after 16 days spaceflight
Authors: Miyake, M.; Yamasaki, M.; Hazama, A.; Ijiri, K.; Shimizu, T.
2004cosp...35.1119M    Altcode: 2004cosp.meet.1119M
  It is important to assure whether digestive system can develop
  normally in neonates during spaceflight. Because the small intestine
  changes its function and structure drastically around weaning known as
  redifferentiation. Lactase expression declines and sucrase increases
  in small intestine for digestion of solid food before weaning. In this
  paper, we compared this enzyme transition and structural development of
  small intestine in neonatal rats after spaceflight. To find digestive
  genes differentially expressed in fight rats, DNA membrane macroarray
  was also used. Eight-day old rats were loaded to Space Shuttle
  Columbia, and housed in the animal facility for 16 days in space
  (STS-90, Neurolab mission). Two control groups (AGC; asynchronous
  ground control and VIV; vivarium) against flight group (FLT) were
  prepared. There was no difference in structure (crypt depth) and cell
  differentiation of epithelium between FLT and AGC by immunohistochemical
  analysis. We found that the amount of sucrase mRNA compared to lactase
  was decreased in FLT by RT-PCR. It reflected the enzyme transition
  was inhibited. Increase of 5 genes (APO A-I, APO A-IV, ACE, aFABP and
  aminopeptidase M) and decrease of carboxypeptidase-D were detected in
  FLT using macroarray. We think nutrition differences (less nourishment
  and late weaning) during spaceflight may cause inhibition of enzyme
  transition at least partly. The weightlessness might contribute to
  the inhibition through behavioral change.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evolution of Vector Magnetic Fields in an Emerging
    Flux Region
Authors: Kubo, M.; Shimizu, T.; Lites, B. W.
2003ApJ...595..465K    Altcode:
  Collaborative observations of NOAA Active Region 9231 were carried out
  during 9 days in 2000 November using the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter
  (ASP), Yohkoh/SXT, TRACE, and SOHO/MDI, in order to record the
  evolution of the photospheric magnetic field and its related coronal
  response. During this period an emerging flux region (EFR) appeared in
  the photosphere near the well-developed leading sunspot of this region,
  and subsequently bright bundles of coronal loops formed between the
  main concentrations of opposite magnetic polarity. The structure of
  the photospheric field comprising the EFR is classified into three
  regions: (1) the main bipolar magnetic flux of the EFR; (2) two small,
  rapidly emerging bipoles within the EFR; and (3) the remainder of
  the EFR excluding the other two regions. Two small, rapidly emerging
  bipoles are observed within a few hours of their first appearance at
  the photosphere. Examination of the vector magnetic field, its filling
  factor, and Doppler motion within the EFR shows that the young emerging
  magnetic field is nearly horizontal, the intrinsic field strength is
  weaker than that of the surrounding magnetic field (~500 G), and the
  weak field has a high filling factor (&gt;80%) and upward motion (&lt;1
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP>). At both ends of the horizontal field structure we
  find that the magnetic field strength increases to about 1500 G and
  the filling factor drops to about 40% as the magnetic field becomes
  vertical in orientation during its first 12 hr. This field strength
  is typical of the field within the main bipolar magnetic flux, but
  the filling factor increases to 80% during the following 2 days. The
  process for organizing magnetic field configuration including convective
  collapse and flux concentration provides one possible explanation
  of the evolution of the field strength and the filling factor in the
  EFR. In addition, aymmetric surface distributions of magnetic field
  inclination were observed in the horizontal magnetic field area in the
  EFR. These asymmetric distributions were also observed in the small,
  young, emerging bipoles. This may mean that the magnetic field of the
  EFR is affected by the preexisting magnetic environment surrounding
  the EFR and that the emerging magnetic loops are deformed before or
  at the time they reach the photospheric level.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spatial and Temporal Properties of Hot and Cool Coronal Loops
Authors: Nagata, Shin'ichi; Hara, Hirohisa; Kano, Ryouhei; Kobayashi,
   Ken; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida, Tsuyoshi;
   Gurman, Joseph B.
2003ApJ...590.1095N    Altcode:
  A suite of images from the XUV Doppler Telescope (XDT), the Yohkoh Soft
  X-ray Telescope (SXT), and the Extreme-Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope
  (EIT) on the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) allow us to
  see the whole (T&gt;1 MK) temperature evolution of coronal loops. The
  detailed morphological comparison of an active region shows that hot
  loops seen in SXT (T&gt;3 MK) and cool loops seen in the the EIT 195
  Å band (T~1.5 MK) are located in almost alternating manner. The
  anticoincidence of the hot and the cool loops is conserved for a
  duration much longer than the estimated cooling timescale. However, both
  hot and cool loops have counterparts in the intermediate-temperature
  images. The cross-correlation coefficients are higher for neighboring
  temperature pairs and lower for pairs with larger temperature
  differences. These results suggest that loops are not isothermal but
  rather have a differential emission measure distribution of modest but
  finite width that peaks at different temperatures for different loops.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of the Solar-B spacecraft
Authors: Tsuneta, Saku; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Suematsu, Yoshinori;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hara, Hirohisa; Kano, Ryohei; Nagata, Shin'ichi;
   Tamura, Tomonori; Nakagiri, Masao; Noguchi, Motokazu; Kato, Yoshihiro;
   Watanabe, Tetsuya; Hanaoka, Yoichiro; Sawa, Masaki; Otsubo, Masashi;
   Kosugi, Takeo; Yamada, Takahiro; Sakao, Taro; Matsuzaki, Keiichi;
   Minesugi, Kenji; Onishi, Akira; Katsukawa, Yukio; Kobayashi, Ken;
   Kubo, Masahito
2003naoj.book....3T    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of Solar-B solar optical telescope
Authors: Suematsu, Yoshinori; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi;
   Nagata, Shin'ichi; Tamura, Tomonori; Tsuneta, Saku; Noguchi, Motokazu;
   Kato, Yoshihiro; Nakagiri, Masao; Otsubo, Masashi; Hanaoka, Yoichiro;
   Katsukawa, Yukio; Kobayashi, Ken; Kubo, Masahito
2003naoj.book....5S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of image stabilization system for solar optical
    telescope onboard Solar-B satellite
Authors: Nagata, Shinichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Ichimoto, Kiyoshi;
   Tsuneta, Saku; Matsuzaki, Keiichi; Kobayashi, Ken
2003naoj.book....8N    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Converging Flows in the Penumbra of a δ Sunspot
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Skumanich, A.; Shimizu, T.
2002ApJ...575.1131L    Altcode:
  Doppler velocities in the penumbra of a δ-configuration sunspot
  observed near the limb indicate flows that converge upon the
  line separating locally positive and negative polarity magnetic
  field (the polarity inversion line). These flows persist for many
  hours. Observations of this region with the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter
  (ASP) reveal a convex vector field geometry with magnetic lines of
  force arching upward from positive polarity, then downward to negative
  polarity. The straightforward interpretation of the combined Doppler
  velocity and vector field information leads to an untenable physical
  situation: were flows directed from both footpoints toward the tops
  of arched magnetic lines of force, mass would rapidly load the tops of
  the arches. However, there is no observational evidence of the dynamics
  that such a loading would require. To better understand this apparent
  contradiction, we perform two-component analyses of the observed Stokes
  spectral profiles in the vicinity of the polarity inversion line, in
  order to extract information about unresolved structure of the magnetic
  field and its associated flows. Fits to the observed profiles, obtained
  by use of two different inversion techniques, suggest strongly that, as
  in penumbrae of simple sunspots, the field geometry in the convergence
  zone is “fluted.” However, unlike in simple sunspots, which have only
  an outward-directed Evershed flow in the more horizontal of the field
  components, at each spatial point our analysis reveals flows in the two
  components that are oppositely directed. We interpret these observations
  as indicative of an interleaved system of field lines in the vicinity
  of the polarity reversal, whereby the convergent streams are able to
  slip past one another and return downward into the solar interior.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Photospheric Magnetic Activities Responsible for Soft
    X-Ray Pointlike Microflares. I. Identifications of Associated
    Photospheric/Chromospheric Activities
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Shine, R. A.; Title, A. M.; Tarbell, T. D.;
   Frank, Z.
2002ApJ...574.1074S    Altcode:
  By combining Yohkoh soft X-ray images with high-resolution magnetograms
  simultaneously obtained at La Palma, we studied photospheric magnetic
  signatures responsible for soft X-ray microflares (active-region
  transient brightenings). In order to have a reliable correspondence
  between the photosphere and the corona, we studied 16 pointlike
  transient brightenings with X-ray source size less than 10" occurring
  during periods when the seeing was excellent at La Palma, although a
  lot of transient brightenings were in forms of multiple- or single-loop
  structures. In half of the studied events, small-scale emergences
  of magnetic flux loops are found in the vicinity of the transient
  brightenings. Six events of that half show that a small-scale flux
  emergence accompanies the X-ray brightening 5-30 minutes prior to
  its onset. In the other half of the studied events, no apparent
  evolutionary change of magnetic flux elements is found associated
  with the transient brightenings. Many of these events are found in
  rather strong magnetic fields, such as sunspots and pores, implying
  that small-scale changes of magnetic flux are obscured or suppressed
  by strong magnetic fields. The horizontal plasma flows derived from
  local cross-correlation tracking of granules in continuum images are
  suppressed at the feet of some X-ray transient brightenings.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Superfast expansion acceleration mechanism in the spontaneous
    fast magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2002AdSpR..29.1081S    Altcode:
  Thermodynamic supersonic (superfast) plasma expansion acceleration
  generated in the spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection process is
  studied in 2-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations. In
  contrast to the Petschek reconnection model, the reconnection outflow
  jet is found to exceed steadily the Alfven velocity measured in
  the upstream magnetic field region. In our MHD simulation for the
  symmetric anti-parallel magnetic field model, the final velocity of
  the plasma jet is observed to reach 1.4 times of the Alfven velocity,
  which is maintained until the jet encounters a fast shock generated
  in front of the magnetic loop (plasmoid). Also in asymmetric magnetic
  field models, in which the current sheet is put between two straight
  magnetic field regions with different intensities, the supersonic plasma
  acceleration mechanism is detected. Especially, in the asymmetric model
  in which uniform plasma density is initially assumed, the supersonic
  acceleration region tends to shift to the side of the higher intensity
  magnetic field region. In addition, the plasma jet region consists of
  two jet layers which have different Mach numbers and almost the same
  jet velocity. It means that the reconnection jet almost have reached
  a steady state. Hence, the generation of the superfast jet can be
  predicted by the Rankine Hugoniot relation for the slow shock. Once
  the superfast jet and magnetic loop are generated, the thermodynamic
  supersonic expansion acceleration can occur due to the change of the
  pressure balance around the magnetic loop.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD wave structures in the plasmoid associated with the fast
    magnetic reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2002cosp...34E1147S    Altcode: 2002cosp.meetE1147S
  Numerical MHD study of fast magnetic reconnection is shown in the
  view of MHD waves generated in the reconnection jet and associated
  plasmoid. In this reconnection model, the reconnection jet generated
  by slow shocks is further accelerated by the thermodynamic expansion
  acceleration mechanism. Depending on the beta value and plasma
  density in the upstream magnetic regions, either supersonic or
  subsonic expansion accelerations is caused with different MHD wave
  structures. Finally, when the resulting jet encounters a plasmoid, the
  slow shock intensity is changed and survives around the plasmoid. It
  is remarkable that the slow shock around the plasmoid is dominant to
  determine the plasmoid propagation speed, rather than the reconnection
  jet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar-B
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Solar-B Team
2002AdSpR..29.2009S    Altcode:
  Following the successful Yohkoh satellite which is continuously
  operating since August 1991, the solar physics community in Japan
  is now preparing for a Japan's next solar physics mission, Solar-B,
  whose primary objective is to study the connection of the dynamics
  and heating in the solar corona with the magnetic field at the
  solar surface. Solar-B will carry a medium-sized optical telescope
  with capability of measuring vector magnetic fields at the solar
  surface, together with two X-ray/EUV imaging telescopes capable of
  measuring the dynamics and physical conditions of hot plasma in the
  solar corona. These telescopes are prepared under the international
  collaborations with U.S.A. (NASA) and U.K. (PPARC). ISAS schedules
  to launch Solar-B as its 22nd science satellite in summer 2005. The
  Solar-B program is now in the proto-model manifacture/test phase and
  the baseline design of the satellite as well as the three telescopes
  is defined.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Connection between Photospheric Magnetic Fields and Coronal
    Structure/Dynamics [Invited]
Authors: Shimizu, T.
2002mwoc.conf...29S    Altcode:
  Continuous observations of the solar X-ray corona with Yohkoh Soft X-ray
  Telescope (SXT) have been revealing that dynamical phenomena, such as
  coronal jets and microflares (transient loop brightenings) are common
  in the corona, especially in the active-region corona. Moreover, the
  heating of the corona is about two order of magnitude more significant
  in the active regions than in the quiet regions. Since observations of
  magnetic fields at the photosphere show that magnetic fields are much
  more concentrated into active regions, it has been widely believed that
  magnetic fields would be responsible for the heating of the corona as
  well as dynamics in the corona. A lot of complicated magnetic activities
  are observed at the photosphere; newly emerging magnetic fields,
  marging to the same-polarity magnetic fields, cancelling magnetic fields
  with the opposite-polarity magnetic fields, developing the shear in
  magnetic field structure, and so on. How are these magnetic activities
  associated with the dynamics and heating well observed in the coronaNULL
  A lot of investigations have been made by comparing Yohkoh observations
  with observations of photospheric magnetic fields. This paper reviews
  some of investigations made in the last decade. Solar-B is now under
  development for the launch scheduled in 2005. Its primary objective
  is to study the connection of the dynamics and heating observed in
  the solar corona with the magnetic field at the solar surface. For
  great advances in understanding the magnetic connection between the
  photosphere and the corona with Solar-B, it is significant important
  to review the recent knowledges obtained in the Yohkoh era.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The dynamics of plasmoid in symmetric and asymmetric
    spontaneous fast reconnection
Authors: Kondoh, K.; Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.
2002cosp...34E2129K    Altcode: 2002cosp.meetE2129K
  The spontaneous fast reconnection evolution is studied in symmetric
  and asymmetric magnetic field configuration. In particularly, it is
  investigated what determines the propagation speed of plasmoid using
  2 dimensional MHD simulations. According to the fast reconnection
  development, the resulting large- scale plasmoids swell and
  propagate. Once the plasmoid fully develops, the propagation speed
  becomes almost constant in symmetric and asymmetric magnetic field
  configuration. In asymmetric magnetic field configuration, an asymmetric
  plasmoid swells predominantly in the region of a weaker magnetic field
  and propagates along the field lines. It is remarkable that the slow
  shocks around the plasmoid determine the propagation speed in the both
  of symmetric and asymmetric magnetic field configuration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The MHD study of the shock waves in the fast magnetic
    reconnection with the thermodynamic supersonic expansion acceleration
    process
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2001AGUFMSM11B0814S    Altcode:
  The structure of the slow and intermediate shock waves in the fast
  magnetic reconnection process is studied in MHD simulations and
  analytic research. Unlike the Petschek reconnection model, in this fast
  reconnection process a thermodynamic supersonic expansion acceleration
  mechanism works to accelerate the reconnection jet generated by slow
  shocks, and hence, the resulting jet can exceed the Alfven velocity
  measured in the upstream field region. The MHD simulation shows that
  the thermodynamic acceleration process destroys a pair of the slow
  shock associated with the Petschek reconnection model, and eventually
  generates a pair of intermediate shocks. But, according to more exact
  researches, just after the formation of the intermediate shock, the
  structure of the intermediate shock may start to be gradually deformed
  into the usual intermediate wave, slow shock and slow expansion waves,
  because the intermediate shock has not the steepening effect which is
  usually required for shock wave. We comprehensively discuss the fast
  reconnection process and the plasmoid (magnetic loop) formed by the
  reconnection process in the view of the MHD wave analysis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Converging Flows in the Penumbra of a δ-Sunspot
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Skumanich, A.; Shimizu, T.
2001ASPC..248..143L    Altcode: 2001mfah.conf..143L
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Thermo-dynamic plasma expansion acceleration in asymmetric
    spontaneous fast magnetic reconnection - conditions required for
    the onset
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2001sps..proc..347S    Altcode:
  One of the onset conditions for the thermodynamic supersonic
  (superfast) plasma expansion acceleration generated in the spontaneous
  fast magnetic reconnection process is studied by 2-dimensional
  magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations and the Rankine Hugoniot
  analysis. In this reconnection model, the reconnection outflow jet can
  steadily exceed the Alfven velocity measured in the upstream magnetic
  field region. Note that this high speed jet cannot be explained by
  the Petsheck reconnection model. According to our previous studies
  (Shimizu and Ugai, 2000), the plasma jet is generated by a combination
  of the slow shock acceleration and adiabatic supersoinc expansion
  acceleration. The former acceleration is the same as that of the
  Petsheck model and the jet can become superfast, i,e, supersonic. The
  latter is caused by the adiabatic expansion of the supersonic plasma
  jet. The expansion process is caused by the swelling of the plasmoid
  (magnetic loop) associated with the reconnection process. In this
  paper, in addition to the symmetric reconnection field case, asymmetric
  cases, in general, will also be studied. It is shown that the condition
  required to generate the supersonic jet by slow shocks is determined by
  the plasma density and beta value in the upstream field region. Once
  the supersonic jet is generated, the adiabatic supersonic expansion
  acceleration is caused just upstream side of the swelling plasmoid. 1
  MHD simulation Figure 1 is obtained in an asymmetric magnetic field
  case starting from an initial asymmetric anti-parallel magnetic field
  in which no plasma flow and uniform plasma density are initially
  set. Figure 1a shows the magnetic field lines

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: NSA Characteristics of the Semi-Anechoic Chamber Composed of
    Absorbers with Different Absorbing Characteristics
Authors: Hamaura, R.; Shimizu, T.; Takiguchi, Y.; Tokuda, M.
2001aprs.conf..301H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Detection of Solar Coronal High-Velocity Fields Using
    the XUV Doppler Telescope
Authors: Kobayashi, Ken; Hara, Hirohisa; Kano, Ryohei; Nagata,
   Shin'ichi; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida,
   Tsuyoshi; Harrison, Richard
2000PASJ...52.1165K    Altcode:
  The XUV Doppler Telescope (XDT) is a sounding rocket experiment
  designed to detect flows in the solar corona using filter ratios. The
  XDT, successfully launched on 1998 January 31, is a normal incidence
  telescope composed of narrow-bandpass multilayer mirrors and capable
  of obtaining images 2 Å\ above and 2 Å\ below the Fe XIV 211 Å\
  (T = 1.7 MK) emission line. It has the potential to make a velocity map
  of the entire solar disk with just a few minutes of observation. The
  image ratio maps show features that translate to Doppler shifts of
  200 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> or more, including several `redshift' features
  located near footpoints of coronal loops. However, no corresponding
  velocity features were seen by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory
  (SOHO) Coronal Diagnostic Spectrometer (CDS) in the Mg IX 368 Å (T =
  1 MK) line, suggesting that the features are not caused by Doppler
  shift. Instead, the features seem to be related to contamination
  of lower temperature (T &lt; 1 MK) emission lines and the nearby
  density-sensitive Fe XIII lines. We conclude that while no flows were
  positively identified by the XDT, this observing technique is capable
  of detecting flows of 1000 km s^{-1} independently, and 200 km s^{-1}$
  when combined with simultaneous plasma diagnostic observation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Thermo-Dynamic Plasma Acceleration Mechanism in the Spontaneous
    Fast Magnetic Reconnection Model
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
2000ASPC..206..183S    Altcode: 2000hesp.conf..183S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Initial Results from the XUV Doppler Telescope
Authors: Kano, R.; Hara, H.; Kobayashi, K.; Kumagai, K.; Nagata, S.;
   Sakao, T.; Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Yoshida, T.
2000AdSpR..25.1739K    Altcode:
  We developed a unique telescope to obtain simultaneous XUV images and
  the velocity maps by measuring the line-of-sight Doppler shifts of the
  Fe XIV 211A&amp;ring line (T = 1.8 MK): the Solar XUV Doppler Telescope
  (hereafter XDT). The telescope was launched by the Institute of Space
  and Astronautical Science with the 22nd S520 rocket on January 31,
  1998, and took 14 XUV whole sun images during 5 minutes. Simultaneous
  observations of XDT with Yohkoh (SXT), SOHO (EIT, CDS, LASCO and MDI)
  were successfully carried out. The images taken with EIT, XDT and SXT
  are able to cover the wide temperature ranging from 1 to 10 MK, and
  clearly show the multi-temperature nature of the solar corona. Indeed,
  we notice that both the cool (1-2 MK) loops observed with EIT and
  XDT, and the hot (&gt;3 MK) loops observed with SXT exist in the same
  active regions but in a spatially exclusive way. The XDT red-blue ratio
  between longer- and shorter-wavelength bands of Fe XIV 211A&amp;ring
  line indicates a possible down-flow of 1.8 MK plasma near the footpoints
  of multiple cool loops

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Weak Transient Activities in the Corona
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1999spro.proc..123S    Altcode:
  Weak transient activities of small-scale coronal loops have been
  reported from Yohkoh and SoHO observations: Active-region transient
  brightenings (ARTBs), XBP flares, network flares, coronal flashes, and
  EUV transient brightenings. They are called with different terminology,
  but no significant differences can be found except for the sizes
  of energy and the locations where they are observed on the Sun. No
  differences except for the sizes of energy can be also found between
  ARTBs and standard flares; The frequency distribution of ARTBs as a
  function of energy is well represented by a single power-law with
  a slope similar to that of standard flares, and relatively strong
  ARTBs are populated by non-thermal electrons. With these observations,
  although more observations are still required, we currently conclude
  that weak transient activities of small-scale coronal loops observed
  not only in active regions but also in quiet regions are just small
  flares (microflares or nanoflares in terminology), which are located
  in lower energy extension of standard flares. No reliable evidences
  suggesting that microflares or nanoflares entirely explain the heating
  of the corona have been found. However, weak temporal variations seen
  in quasi-steady long loops are found to be well correlated with the
  heating level, suggesting that they may be an X-ray signature of the
  heating process responsible for the heating of the corona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar-B (The Next Japanese Solar Mission)
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Solar-B Working Group
1999spro.proc..459S    Altcode:
  Our view of the solar corona has been revolutionized by Yohkoh. Yohkoh
  has shown that the hot corona is extremely dynamic, with magnetic
  reconnection, rapid heating, and mass ejection being common
  phenomena. The next vital step is to understand magnetic origins of
  coronal dynamics and heating. Solar-B, Japan's next solar physics
  mission, is designed to study the connection of the dynamics and
  heating observed in the corona with the magnetic field at the solar
  surface. Solar-B will carry a medium-sized optical telescope capable
  of measuring vector magnetic fields on the solar surface, together
  with two X-ray/EUV imaging instruments for the solar corona. The
  Solar-B program is now in the conceptual design study phase. ISAS,
  in collaboration with NASA (U.S.A.) and PPARC (U.K.), plans to launch
  Solar-B as its 22nd science satellite in summer 2004.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Narrow-Bandpass Multilayer Mirrors for an Extreme-Ultraviolet
    Doppler Telescope
Authors: Hara, Hirohisa; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Kano, Ryouhei; Kumagai,
   Kazuyoshi; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida,
   Tsuyoshi; Ishiyama, Wakana; Oshino, Tetsuya; Murakami, Katsuhiko
1999ApOpt..38.6617H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The XUV Doppler Telescope (XDT)
Authors: Sakao, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Hara, H.; Shimizu, T.; Kano, R.;
   Kumagai, K.; Yoshida, T.; Nagata, S.; Kobayashi, K.
1999SoPh..187..303S    Altcode:
  We present an overview and instrumental details of the solar XUV Doppler
  Telescope (XDT) launched in January 1998 with the S520CN-22 sounding
  rocket of the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science. The XDT
  observes nearly single-temperature solar corona at 1.8 MK with angular
  resolution of ≈ 5” pixel size, together with the ability to detect
  the coronal velocity field with a full-Sun field of view. By use of
  normal incidence optics whose primary and secondary mirrors are coated
  with multilayer materials in two sectors, the XDT takes images of the
  Sun in a set of shorter and longer wavelength bands around the Fe xiv
  211.3 Å emission line. Summation of a pair of images in the two bands
  provides an image of the 1.8 MK-corona while the difference between
  the two provides velocity images of the Fe xiv-emitting plasma. A brief
  description on the observation sequence together with the flight result
  is also given.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development and flight performance of tip-tilt mirror system
    for a sounding rocket observation of the Sun.
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Yoshida, T.; Tsuneta, S.; Sakao, T.; Kano,
   R.; Hara, H.; Nagata, S.; Kodeki, K.; Inoue, M.; Fukushima, K.;
   Kashiwase, T.
1999RNAOJ...4...43S    Altcode: 1999RNOAJ...4...43S
  A tip-tilt mirror (TTM) system was developed for the XUV Doppler
  telescope (XDT) on board an ISAS sounding rocket. The spatial resolution
  of the telescope is about 5″ whereas the pointing stability is
  only ±0.3° with the rocket pointing control system. To achieve
  better than 5″stability on the focal plane of the telescope, the
  TTM system controls the tilt of the secondary mirror with fixed-coil
  magnetic actuators. The control signal to stabilize focal-plane images
  is supplied by the position-sensitive detector (PSD) of a pin-hole
  telescope equipped inside XDT. Closed-loop controls are made with
  the on-board software on the DSP processor. The sounding rocket was
  successfully launched on 31 January 1998 from the Kagoshima Space
  Center of ISAS. TTM worked perfectly during the flight, and achieved
  better than 5″stability on the focal plane during CCD exposures.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: a Relativistic Description of Gentry's New Redshift
    Interpretation
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Watanabe, K.
1999MPLA...14..779S    Altcode: 1999astro.ph..2278S
  We obtain a new expression of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric,
  which is an analogue of a static chart of the de Sitter space-time. The
  reduced metric contains two functions, M(T, R) and Ψ(T, R), which are
  interpreted as, respectively, the mass function and the gravitational
  potential. We find that, near the coordinate origin, the reduced metric
  can be approximated in a static form and that the approximated metric
  function, Ψ(R) satisfies the Poisson equation. Moreover, when the
  model parameters of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric are suitably
  chosen, the approximated metric coincides with exact solutions of
  the Einstein equation with the perfect fluid matter. We then solve
  the radial geodesics on the approximated space-time to obtain the
  distance-redshift relation of geodesic sources observed by the comoving
  observer at the origin. We find that the redshift is expressed in
  terms of a peculiar velocity of the source and the metric function,
  Ψ(R), evaluated at the source position, and one may think that this
  is a new interpretation of Gentry's new redshift interpretation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Why is the corona hot? Micro- and nano-flares and the solar
    corona.
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1998AstHe..91..399S    Altcode:
  The solar corona is the upper atmosphere which consists of faint, hot
  (&gt;2 million K degree) plasma. Why is the corona so hot? This is one
  of fundamental questions in astrophysics. Micro- and nano-flares have
  been recently considered as a mechanism for energy dissipation in the
  corona. The soft X-ray telescope on board the Yohkoh satellite enables
  one for the first time to investigate micro- and nano-flares. This
  article introduces some observational results of micro- and nano-flares,
  and discusses their implications for heating of the corona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of the tip-tilt mirror system for the solar
    XUV telescope
Authors: Kodeki, Kazuhide; Fukushima, Kazuhiko; Kashiwase, Toshio;
   Inoue, Masao; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Yoshida, Tsuyoshi; Sakao, Taro;
   Hara, Hirohisa; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Kano, Ryouhei; Tsuneta, Saku
1998SPIE.3356..922K    Altcode:
  This paper describes the design and prelaunch performance of the
  tip-tilt mirror (TTM) system developed for the XUV Cassegrain telescope
  aboard the ISAS sounding rocket experiment. The spatial resolution
  of the telescope is about 5 arcsec, whereas the rocket pointing is
  only controlled to be within +/- 0.5 degree around the target without
  stability control. The TTM is utilized to stabilize the XUV image
  on the focal planes by tilting the secondary mirror with two-axes
  fixed-coil type actuators. The two position- sensitive detectors in
  the telescope optics and in the TTM mechanical structure from the
  normal and local closed-loop modes. The TTM has four grain modes with
  automatic transition among the modes. The low gain mode is used in
  the initial acquisition, and in case the TTM loses the tracking. The
  high gain mode is used in the normal tracking mode. This arrangement
  provides us with the wide initial acquisition angle with single TTM
  system as well as the high pointing accuracy once the tracking is
  established. The TTM has a launch-lock mechanism against the launch
  vibration of 16G. The closed-loop control with command and telemetry
  interface is done by the flight software against the launch vibration
  of 16G. The closed-loop control with command and telemetry interface
  is done by the flight software on the DSP processor. The use of the
  fast processor brings in the significant reduction in the weight and
  size of the control- electronics, more flexible control system, and
  shorter design and testing period.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: XUV Doppler Telescope Aboard Sounding Rocket
Authors: Yoshida, T.; Kano, R.; Nagata, S.; Hara, H.; Sakao, T.;
   Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, S.
1998ASSL..229..383Y    Altcode: 1998opaf.conf..383Y
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Scientific Objectives of the Solar-B Mission
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1998ESASP.417..169S    Altcode: 1998cesh.conf..169S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Test Particle Simulations of Proton Accelerations in
    Spontaneous Fast Magnetic Reconnection
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Ugai, M.
1998ASSL..238..723S    Altcode: 1998subs.conf..723S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deep Survey of Solar Nano-Flares with YOHKOH
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, S.
1998ASSL..229...27S    Altcode: 1998opaf.conf...27S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deep Survey of Solar Nanoflares with Yohkoh
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku
1997ApJ...486.1045S    Altcode:
  Short timescale variability fainter than transient brightenings
  (microflares) is found in the solar position-dependent light curves
  observed with the Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope. The time variability is
  found almost everywhere in active regions and X-ray bright points,
  while no significant variability is found in quiet regions. An
  intensity correlation is found between the magnitudes of the time
  variability and the intensities of the persistent corona. The time
  variability is apparently related to the heating mechanism of the
  persistent active-region corona. The intensity correlation can be
  explained with the idea that the persistent corona is made of extremely
  numerous nanoflares, larger ones of which are observed as the time
  variability. The alternative explanation is that a common parameter
  controls both the persistent corona and the time variability.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: XUV Doppler telescope with multilayer optics
Authors: Hara, Hirohisa; Kano, Ryouhei; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Sakao, Taro;
   Shimizu, Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida, Tsuyoshi; Kosugi, Takeo
1997SPIE.3113..420H    Altcode:
  We present an overview of a sounding-rocket experiment, which is
  scheduled to be launched by the Institute of Space and Astronautical
  Science (ISAS) in January 1998, the rising phase of the 11-year activity
  cycle of the sun. The purpose of this experiment is (1) to obtain
  whole-sun images taken in an XUV emission line, Fe XIV 211 angstrom,
  using the normal incidence multilayer optics with a high spectral
  resolution of (lambda) /(Delta) (lambda) approximately equals 40, and
  (2) to carry out the velocity-field measurement with detection limit
  as high as 100 km/s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of multilayer mirrors for the XUV Doppler telescope
Authors: Nagata, Shin'ichi; Hara, Hirohisa; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu,
   Toshifumi; Tsuneta, Saku; Yoshida, Tsuyoshi; Ishiyama, Wakana;
   Murakami, Katsuhiko; Oshino, Tetsuya
1997SPIE.3113..193N    Altcode:
  We present the development status of the normal incidence XUV multilayer
  mirrors for XUV Doppler telescope, which observes coronal velocity
  fields of the whole sun. The telescope has two narrow band-pass
  multilayer mirrors tuned to slightly longer and shorter wavelengths
  around the Fe XIV line at 211.3 Angstrom. From the intensity difference
  of the images taken with these two bands, we can obtain Dopplergram of
  1.8 MK plasma of the whole sun. It is required that the multilayer has
  high wavelength-resolution ((lambda) /(Delta) (lambda) approximately
  30 per mirror), anti-reflection coating for intense He II 304 angstrom
  emission line and high d-spacing uniformity of approximately 1%.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Neutral-Line Magnetic Shear and Enhanced Coronal Heating in
    Solar Active Regions
Authors: Falconer, D. A.; Moore, R. L.; Porter, J. G.; Gary, G. A.;
   Shimizu, T.
1997ApJ...482..519F    Altcode:
  By examining the magnetic structure at sites in the bright coronal
  interiors of active regions that are not flaring but exhibit persistent
  strong coronal heating, we establish some new characteristics of
  the magnetic origins of this heating. We have examined the magnetic
  structure of these sites in five active regions, each of which was well
  observed by both the Yohkoh SXT and the Marshall Space Flight Center
  Vector Magnetograph and showed strong shear in its magnetic field along
  part of at least one neutral line (polarity inversion). Thus, we can
  assess whether this form of nonpotential field structure in active
  regions is a characteristic of the enhanced coronal heating and vice
  versa. From 27 orbits' worth of Yohkoh SXT images of the five active
  regions, we have obtained a sample of 94 persistently bright coronal
  features (bright in all images from a given orbit), 40 long (&gt;~20,000
  km) neutral-line segments having strong magnetic shear throughout
  (shear angle greater than 45°), and 39 long neutral-line segments
  having weak magnetic shear throughout (shear angle less than 45°). From
  this sample, we find that (1) all of our persistently bright coronal
  features are rooted in magnetic fields that are stronger than 150 G,
  (2) nearly all (95%) of these enhanced coronal features are rooted near
  neutral lines (closer than 10,000 km), (3) a great majority (80%) of the
  bright features are rooted near strong-shear portions of neutral lines,
  (4) a great majority (85%) of long strong-shear segments of neutral
  lines have persistently bright coronal features rooted near them, (5)
  a large minority (40%) of long weak-shear segments of neutral lines
  have persistently bright coronal features rooted near them, and (6)
  the brightness of a persistently bright coronal feature often changes
  greatly over a few hours. From these results, we conclude that most
  persistent enhanced heating of coronal loops in active regions (1)
  requires the presence of a polarity inversion in the magnetic field
  near at least one of the loop footpoints, (2) is greatly aided by the
  presence of strong shear in the core magnetic field along that neutral
  line, and (3) is controlled by some variable process that acts in this
  magnetic environment. We infer that this variable process is low-lying
  reconnection accompanying flux cancellation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Nonthermal Radio Emission from Solar Soft X-Ray Transient
    Brightenings
Authors: Gary, Dale E.; Hartl, Michael D.; Shimizu, Toshifumi
1997ApJ...477..958G    Altcode:
  We compare microwave total power spectral data from the Owens Valley
  Radio Observatory Solar Array with soft X-ray transient brightenings
  observed with the Yohkoh soft X-ray telescope. We find that the
  transient brightenings are clearly detected in microwaves in 12
  of 34 events (35%), possibly detected in another 17 of 34 events
  (50%), and only five of 34 events (15%) had no apparent microwave
  counterpart. Comparing the radio and soft X-ray characteristics, we
  find that (1) the soft X-ray peak is delayed relative to the microwave
  peak in 16 of 20 events, (2) the microwave flux is correlated with
  the flux seen in soft X-rays, (3) when radio fluence is used instead
  of radio flux (24 events) the correlation increases substantially,
  (4) the microwave spectra in the range 1-18 GHz vary greatly from
  event to event, (5) the microwave spectra often peak in the range 5-10
  GHz (13 of 16 events), and (6) the microwave spectra of some events
  show narrowband spectra with a steep low-frequency slope. <P />We
  conclude that the emission from at least some events is the result of
  a nonthermal population of electrons, and that transient brightenings
  as a whole can therefore be identified as microflares, the low-energy
  extension of the general flare energy distribution. Soft X-ray transient
  brightenings, and therefore microflares, cannot heat the corona.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Gauge Dependence of Post-Newtonian Approximation in General
    Relativity
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1997gwd..conf..327S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Japanese sounding rocket experiment with the solar XUV
    Doppler telescope
Authors: Sakao, Taro; Tsuneta, Saku; Hara, Hirohisa; Kano, Ryouhei;
   Yoshida, Tsuyoshi; Nagata, Shin'ichi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Kosugi,
   Takeo; Murakami, Katsuhiko; Wasa, Wakuna; Inoue, Masao; Miura,
   Katsuhiro; Taguchi, Koji; Tanimoto, Kazuo
1996SPIE.2804..153S    Altcode:
  We present an overview of an ongoing Japanese sounding rocket project
  with the Solar XUV Doppler telescope. The telescope employs a pair
  of normal incidence multilayer mirrors and a back-thinned CCD, and is
  designed to observe coronal velocity field of the whole sun by measuring
  line- of-sight Doppler shifts of the Fe XIV 211 angstroms line. The
  velocity detection limit is estimated to be better than 100 km/s. The
  telescope will be launched by the Institute of Space and Astronautical
  Science in 1998, when the solar activity is going to be increasing
  towards the cycle 23 activity maximum. Together with the overview of
  the telescope, the current status of the development of each telescope
  components including multilayer mirrors, telescope structure, image
  stabilization mechanism, and focal plane assembly, are reviewed. The
  observation sequence during the flight is also briefly described.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Microflaring in Sheared Core Magnetic Fields and Episodic
    Heating in Large Coronal Loops
Authors: Porter, J. G.; Falconer, D. A.; Moore, R. L.; Harvey, K. L.;
   Rabin, D. M.; Shimizu, T.
1996AAS...188.7018P    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28..941P
  We have previously reported that large, outstandingly-bright coronal
  loops within an active region or stemming from an active region have
  one end rooted around a magnetic island of included polarity that is
  itself a site of locally enhanced coronal heating (X-ray bright point)
  [Porter et al 1996, in Proceedings of the Yohkoh Solar/Stellar IAU
  Symposium, ed. Y. Uchida, T. Kosugi, H.S. Hudson (Kluwer: Dordrecht), in
  press]. This suggests that exceptional magnetic structure in and around
  the magnetic island fosters magnetic activity, such as microflaring,
  that results in the enhanced coronal heating in both the compact core
  field around the island and in the body of large loops that extend
  from this site. We have also reported that enhanced coronal heating
  in active regions goes hand-in-hand with strong magnetic shear in
  the core magnetic fields along polarity neutral lines (Falconer et al
  1995, BAAS, 27(2), 976). Here, by combining MSFC vector magnetograms
  with an NSO full-disk magnetogram and Yohkoh SXT coronal images, we
  examine the incidence of sheared core fields, enhanced coronal heating,
  and microflaring in two active regions having several good examples
  of enhanced extended coronal loops. It appears that the localized
  microflaring activity in sheared core fields is basically similar
  whether the core field is on the neutral line around an island of
  included polarity or on the main neutral line of an entire bipolar
  active region. This suggests that the enhanced coronal heating in an
  extended loop stemming from near a polarity inversion line requires a
  special field configuration at its foot to plug it into the activity at
  the neutral line, rather than a different kind of activity in the core
  field on the neutral line. We also examine whether the waxing and waning
  of the coronal brightness of extended loops shows any correlation with
  the vigor or frequency of microflaring at the feet. This research was
  supported by the Solar Physics Branch of NASA's Office of Space Science.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence that Strong Coronal Heating Results from Photospheric
    Magnetic Flux Cancellation
Authors: Moore, R. L.; Falconer, D. A.; Porter, J. G.; Gary, G. A.;
   Shimizu, T.
1996AAS...188.8604M    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28..963M
  Soft X-ray images of the Sun's corona, such as those from the Yohkoh
  SXT, show that the sites of strongest persistent (non-flare) coronal
  heating are located within the strong (&gt;100 gauss) magnetic fields
  in sunspot regions and are limited to only certain places within these
  stong-field domains, covering only a fraction of the total area. We have
  examined the structure of the magnetic field at these sites in 5 active
  regions by superposing Yohkoh SXT coronal X-ray images on MSFC vector
  magnetograms. We find: (1) nearly all of the enhanced (outstandingly
  bright) coronal features that persist for tens of minutes are rooted
  near polarity neutral lines in the photospheric magnetic flux; (2) in
  most cases the core magnetic field closely straddling the neutral line
  at the root of the strong heating is strongly sheared; (3) the enhanced
  coronal X-ray brightness in the low-lying core fields shows spatial
  substructure that fluctuates on time scales of minutes, in the manner
  of microflaring; and (4) large parts of extensive enhanced coronal
  features often last for no more than a few hours. From these results,
  it appears that most enhanced coronal heating in active regions is a
  consequence of some process that (1) acts only in the presence of a
  photospheric polarity neutral line, (2) is episodic on times of about
  an hour, (3) usually gives stronger coronal heating in the presence of
  stronger magnetic shear, but is not required to act by the presence of
  magnetic shear, and (4) is often accompanied by microflaring in the
  core field. We point out that magnetic flux cancellation (driven by
  photospheric flows at the neutral line) is a process that plausibly
  meets all these requirements. The flux cancellation might directly
  drive microflaring, or trigger microflaring in the sheared core field,
  or both. The microflaring might directly produce the enhanced coronal
  heating in the core fields as well as generate MHD waves that propagate
  up into the enhanced extended coronal loops to provide the strong
  coronal heating in these.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Nonthermal Microwave Emission from Soft X-ray Transient
    Brightenings.
Authors: Gary, D. E.; Hartl, M.; Shimizu, T.
1996AAS...188.2609G    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28..858G
  Soft X-ray transient brightenings (TBs) are small enhancements,
  generally associated with active region loops, that last for 5-10
  min. Shimizu et al. (1994) has shown that the rate of energy release in
  TBs has the same form as that for flares, and if they are interpreted
  as tiny flares they would extend the flare energy release rate to lower
  energy by two orders of magnitude. However, in initial investigation of
  radio counterparts of TBs near 15 GHz (Gopalswamy et al 1995; White et
  al. 1995) showed no conclusive evidence for nonthermal electrons, which
  brings into question whether TBs are flare-like energy releases. The
  presence of nonthermal electrons is most easily seen at somewhat lower
  radio frequencies, which led us to search for such emission in radio
  data from the OVRO Solar Array in the range 1-18 GHz. Using soft X-ray
  observations from Yohkoh, we identified 34 transient brightenings in
  solar active region AR7172 observed from 20-29 May 1992. A comparison
  with radio data from OVRO yielded the following new results: 1) enhanced
  radio emission can be positively associated with TBs in 12 events (35%),
  with another 17 (50%) showing a possible association; 2) a number of
  the positive associations show radio peaks that occur near the onset
  of the soft X-ray enhancement, with a Neupert-Effect-like relationship
  (mean delay of the soft X-ray peak relative to the microwave peak is
  2.5 min); 3) the radio power spectra of those events intense enough
  to give good spectra indicate the presence of a nonthermal electron
  population; 4) the correlation between peak radio flux and peak soft
  X-ray flux is weak. For the 7 events with the clearest Neupert-Effect
  relationship, there is a much higher correlation between integrated
  radio flux and peak soft X-ray flux. Together these results suggest
  that TBs are the analog of solar flares extended below the subflare
  energy range. We may now state that the low-energy extension of flare
  events is not sufficient to heat the corona, but the study of TBs can
  shed light on flare processes that may be masked in larger flares.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small-Scale Horizontal Magnetic Fields in the Solar Photosphere
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Leka, K. D.; Skumanich, A.; Martinez Pillet,
   V.; Shimizu, T.
1996ApJ...460.1019L    Altcode:
  We present recent observations of quiet regions near the center
  of the solar disk using the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter. These
  observations reveal a component of the solar magnetic field heretofore
  unobserved: isolated, small-scale (typically 1"-2" or smaller),
  predominantly horizontal magnetic flux structures in the solar
  photosphere. These features occur in isolation of the well-known,
  nearly vertical flux concentrations usually seen in the photospheric
  "network." Hence we ascribe this horizontal flux to the photospheric
  "internetwork." They reveal themselves by the distinct signature
  of the Stokes Q and U polarization profiles, which are symmetric
  about the line center. The polarization signals are weak, with peak
  amplitudes typically ∼0.1%-0.2% of the continuum intensity in the
  resolved spectral profiles, but they are well above the noise level
  of these observations (≍0.05%). Such magnetic fields are weak
  (significantly less than 1000 G) and largely horizontal owing to
  the absence, or near absence, of accompanying Stokes V polarization
  when observed at the center of the solar disk. These horizontal field
  elements are often associated with blueshifted Stokes line profiles,
  and they often occur between regions of opposite polarity (but weak)
  Stokes V profiles. The horizontal elements are short-lived, typically
  lasting ∼5 minutes. Our observations suggest that we are viewing the
  emergence of small, concentrated loops of flux, carried upward either
  by granular convection or magnetic buoyancy. Even though these entities
  show weak field strengths, they also seem to be fairly common, implying
  that they could carry the order of 10<SUP>24</SUP> Mx of magnetic flux
  to the surface on a daily basis. However, further observational study
  is needed to identify the specific nature of this phenomenon.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Signatures of Global Mode Alfven Resonance Heating in
    Coronal Loops
Authors: Ofman, L.; Davila, J. M.; Shimizu, T.
1996ApJ...459L..39O    Altcode:
  The Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) observations of active region
  coronal loops transient brightening is analyzed, and the scaling of
  the thermal energy release with loop lengths is found to be Eth ~
  L1.60+/-0.09. The numerically determined scaling of the global
  mode heating rate for the resonant absorption of Alfven waves,
  H ~ L, is found to agree with the heating rate deduced from the
  observed thermal energy scaling, provided that the magnetic field
  scales as B ~ L-0.70+/-0.05 and the waves are driven with a omega -1
  spectrum. Previous analytical and numerical studies have shown that the
  heating due to resonant absorption of Alfven waves is most efficient at
  the global mode frequency. In agreement with these studies, we suggest
  that coronal loop transient X-ray brightenings occur when a given
  length coronal loop is perturbed at its global mode frequency by random
  footpoint motions, which results in more efficient heating of the loop.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Gravitational collapse of rotating stellar cores and supernovae
Authors: Sato, K.; Shimizu, T. M.; Yamada, S.
1996NuPhA.606..118S    Altcode:
  As is well known, massive stars, which would be the progenitor of
  type II supernovae, are rapid rotators. It is obviously necessary to
  investigate the effects of rotation on gravitational collapse of stellar
  cores and supernova explosions. We review (i) rotational core collapse,
  (ii) jet-like explosion induced by rotation and asymmetric neutrino
  emission from proto-neutron-stars, and (iii) explosive nucleosynthesis
  when an asymmetric jet-like explosion occurs, based on our recent work.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: YOHKOH Observations Related to Coronal Heating (Invited)
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1996ASPC..111...59S    Altcode: 1997ASPC..111...59S
  Yohkoh observations of microflares (transient brightenings) and
  nanoflares are presented. The frequency distribution of transient
  brightenings is found to be a power law with an index of 1.5 - 1.6
  in the energy range greater than 10<SUP>27</SUP>erg. Short time-scale
  variability fainter than transient brightenings is found in the soft
  X-ray position-dependent light curves. Time variability is found
  almost everywhere in active regions and X-ray bright points, while no
  significant variability is found in the quiet Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Heating of Active Region Corona by Transient Brightenings
    (Microflares)
Authors: Shimizu, T.; Tsuneta, T.; Title, A.; Tarbell, T.; Shine,
   R.; Frank, Z.
1996mpsa.conf...37S    Altcode: 1996IAUCo.153...37S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Computer Simulations on the Spontaneous Fast Reconnection
    Mechanism
Authors: Ugai, M.; Shimizu, T.; Obayashi, T.
1996mpsa.conf..583U    Altcode: 1996IAUCo.153..583U
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic Roots of Enhanced High Coronal Loops
Authors: Porter, J. C.; Falconer, D. A.; Moore, R. L.; Harvey, K. L.;
   Rabin, D. M.; Shimizu, T.
1996mpsa.conf..429P    Altcode: 1996IAUCo.153..429P
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Radio Properties of Solar Active Region Soft X-Ray
    Transient Brightenings
Authors: White, S. M.; Kundu, M. R.; Shimizu, T.; Shibasaki, K.;
   Enome, S.
1995ApJ...450..435W    Altcode:
  We present the results of a search for radio emission from active-region
  transient brightenings identified in Yohkoh soft X-ray telescope
  observations of active region AR 7260. We present detailed observations
  of four events in which 17 GHz radio emission is clearly detected in
  observations by the Nobeyama radioheliograph. The time profiles of
  the 17 GHz data are very similar to those of the soft X-ray fluxes,
  and the 17 GHz flux is very close to that expected from plasma with
  the temperature and emission measure derived for the soft X-ray
  emitting material from filter ratios. No impulsive nonthermal radio
  emission was detected from any of the four events, although each was
  at least GOES class B 1 in soft X-rays. Weak hard X-rays may have been
  detected by GRO/BATSE from the strongest of the events, but not from
  two others. These negative results leave open the possibility that
  there is a difference between active region transient brightenings
  and solar flares, in that the former do not convert a significant
  amount of the released energy into accelerated electrons. However,
  confirmation of this hypothesis will require a larger sample of events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coordinated Observation of the Solar Corona Using the Norikura
    Coronagraph and the YOHKOH Soft X-Ray Telescope
Authors: Ichimoto, K.; Hara, H.; Takeda, A.; Kumagai, K.; Sakurai,
   T.; Shimizu, T.; Hudson, H. S.
1995ApJ...445..978I    Altcode:
  Spectroscopic observations of coronal emission lines were carried
  out at the Norikura Solar Observatory in cooperation with the soft
  X-ray telescope on board the Yohkoh satellite to study the plasma
  distributions at different temperatures. Intensity and velocity
  distributions in Fe XIV wavelength 5303 (green), Fe X wavelength
  6374 (red), and Ca XV wavelength 5694 (yellow) lines are compared
  with the soft X-ray images. It is found that the soft X-ray images
  closely resemble those of the yellow line that represents a rather
  high temperature component of the corona. On the other hand the
  low-temperature component seen in the green and the red lines shows
  quite a different distribution from that of the high-temperature
  component; the low-temperature component consists of many thin loops
  or streaks, while the high-temperature component is more diffuse. We
  find that the active elements of the cool component, i.e., complex
  loop systems, rapid changes of small structures, and localized large
  plasma motions, all tend to be cospatial with the hot component.

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Title: YOHKOH SXT/HXT Observations of a Two-Loop Interaction Solar
    Flare on 1992 December 9
Authors: Inda-Koide, Mika; Sakai, Jun-Ichi; Koide, Shinji; Kosugi,
   Takeo; Sakao, Taro; Shimizu, Toshifumi
1995PASJ...47..323I    Altcode:
  Observations with the Soft X-ray and Hard X-ray Telescopes aboard Yohkoh
  of a simple solar flare on 1992 December 9 are discussed. The soft X-ray
  morphology suggests evidence of a loop-loop interaction mechanism:
  the images reveal two parallel magnetic loops prior to the flare,
  and their merging just before onset of the hard X-ray burst. This
  flare therefore provides a chance to examine the two-loop interaction
  model for solar flares. It is found (1) that the observed soft X-ray
  behavior of the two loops in the preflare phase well matches to the
  two-loop interaction model between strong and weak current loops and
  (2) that the observed time scale of the two-loop coalescence is almost
  equal to that estimated from explosive-reconnection theory. In the
  impulsive phase, it is found (3) that the loop-top portion near to the
  interaction region first brightens in the 14--23 keV hard X-rays and (4)
  that the 23--33 keV hard X-ray emission around the peak time originates
  dominantly from two compact sources at the two ends of the merging
  loops. These hard X-ray observations are explained by high-energy
  electrons that are produced in the two current loop interaction.

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Title: Energetics and Occurrence Rate of Active-Region Transient
    Brightenings and Implications for the Heating of the Active-Region
    Corona
Authors: Shimizu, Toshifumi
1995PASJ...47..251S    Altcode:
  Frequent transient brightenings have been discovered in solar
  active regions using the Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope. We examine the
  possibility that these transient brightenings have much contribution
  to heating of the active-region corona. Imaging observations provide
  the following physical conditions: temperature, 4--8 MK; emission
  measure, 10(44.5) --10(47.5) cm(-3) ; electron density, 2 times 10(9)
  --2 times 10(10) cm(-3) ; gas pressure, 5--20 dyne cm(-2) ; loop
  length, 5 times 10(3) --4 times 10(4) km; loop width, 2 times 10(3)
  --7 times 10(3) km; and duration, 2--7 min. The energy involved in
  the observed transient brightenings is estimated to range from 10(25)
  to 10(29) erg. The frequency distribution as a function of the energy
  can be represented by a single power-law with an index of 1.5--1.6 in
  the energy range greater than 10(27) erg, although the distribution
  deviates from a power-law in the energy range less than 10(27) erg
  due to the instrument dead time and/or obscuration by bright coronal
  features. The single power-law of the frequency distribution thus
  appears to extend from the solar flare range down to an energy of 10(27)
  erg. The total energy supplied by transient brightenings and flares,
  assuming that the power-law continues to lower energy, is estimated
  to be at most a factor of 5 smaller than the heating rate required for
  the active-region corona. We need weaker events with an occurrence rate
  much higher than the extrapolated power-law to explain the heating of
  the active-region corona with transient brightenings.

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Title: Temperature Structure of Active Regions Deduced from the
    Helium-Like Sulphur Lines
Authors: Watanabe, Tetsuya; Haka, Hirohisa; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hiei,
   Eijiro; Bentley, Robert D.; Lang, James; Phillips, Kenneth J. H.; David
   Pike, C.; Fludra, Andrzej; Bromage, Barbara J. I.; Mariska, John T.
1995SoPh..157..169W    Altcode:
  Solar active-region temperatures have been determined from the full-Sun
  spectra of helium-like sulphur (SXV) observed by the Bragg Crystal
  Spectrometer on board theYohkoh satellite. The average temperature
  deduced from SXV is demonstrated to vary with the solar activity level:
  A temperature of 2.5 × 10<SUP>6</SUP> K is derived from the spectra
  taken during low solar activity, similar to the general corona, while
  4 × 10<SUP>6</SUP> K is obtained during a higher activity phase. For
  the latter, the high-temperature tail of the differential emission
  measure of active regions is found most likely due to the superposition
  of numerous flare-like events (micro/nano-flares).

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Title: Transient Brightenings in Active Regions Observed by the
    Yohkoh Soft X-Ray Telescope
Authors: Shimizu, T.
1995SPD....26..712S    Altcode: 1995BAAS...27..968S
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: Magnetic Shear and Enhanced Coronal Heating in Active Regions
Authors: Falconer, D.; Moore, R. L.; Porter, J.; Shimizu, T.;
   Shearer, K.
1995SPD....26..913F    Altcode: 1995BAAS...27..976F
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: Explosion mechanism of collapse-driven supernovae
Authors: Sato, K.; Shimizu, T.; Yamada, S.
1995NuPhA.588..345S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS