Presenter: Jan Stenflo
Affiliation: ETH Zurich
Title: The Sun as a Rosetta stone for polarization physics
Authors: J.O. Stenflo
Form: invited
Abstract: The Sun has often been referred to as a Rosetta stone for astrophysics, since its proximity allows us to explore in detail the fundamental processes that govern the physics of objects in distant parts of the universe. Among these fundamental processes there was little attention given to polarization phenomena until about a decade ago, apart from various applications of the standard Zeeman effect for magnetic field diagnostics. With the implementation of new, highly sensitive imaging Stokes polarimeters a new and previously unfamiliar face of the Sun has been revealed, in the form of the richly structured Second Solar Spectrum. Its spectral structures are exclusively due to coherent scattering processes that are modified by partial decoherence due to magnetic fields via the Hanle effect. The observed polarization phenomena are signatures of a rich variety of combinations of quantum-state superpositions, which in a unique way reconnects astrophysics with fundamental aspects of quantum theory. In this review I try to illustrate this new connection between solar and quantum physics.
Session: 1. Second Solar Spectrum
Presentation
date:
 
Monday 17th September
Presentation
time:
 
09:30:00