Friday, October 14, 2005, 4:10pm, Room 108 EPS
Speaker:
Dr. Hakeem M. Oluseyi The University of Alabama in Huntsville
Title:
" Realistic Constraints on Three New Classes of Solar Upper Transition
Region Structures"
Abstract:
The ultimate goal of the solar and stellar astrophysicist is to derive a
model of stars’ structure that correctly describes their details from
the core to the surface and out into its diffuse atmosphere. In the
early 20th century, the discovery of nuclear fusion was combined with
realistic descriptions of radiative transfer to develop models which
many believed had fulfilled this goal. However, the discovery of the hot
outer layers of the sun, known as the corona, transition region, and
corona, as well as the solar wind yielded such models inadequate. The
interactions of magnetic fields with the diffuse outer atmospheres of
the sun and stars generate an array of magnetohydrodynamic phenomena
that have yet to be fully understood after over a half century of study.
Indeed, the coronal heating problem is one of the most enduring
unresolved problems in astrophysics. The solar transition region, in
particular, has been extremely challenging to understand. In this talk I
will describe recent advances in understanding the solar transition
region and present a new model of the solar upper transition region that
represents a significant departure from previous models.
Host:
Charles Kankelborg
Refreshments 3:45 p.m. EPS - 2nd Floor Atrium