computer vision for solar physicssdo science workshop, may 2011 computer vision for solar physics...
Post on 19-Dec-2015
216 views
TRANSCRIPT
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Computer Vision for Solar Physics
Piet Martens
Montana State University
Center for Astrophysics
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
SDO Feature Finding Team
Module HomesHarvard-Smithsonian: Flare Detective, Dimming Detector, Bright Point Detector,
EIT Waves, Polarity Inversion Line Mapping
MSU: Trainable Module
Johns Hopkins-APL: Filament Detection
Boston University: Coronal Jets
SwRI: SWAMIS: Magnetic Feature Tracking, Emerging Flux, Sunspots. CMEs
Royal Observatory of Belgium: SpoCa: Active Regions, Coronal Holes
New Mexico State: Oscillations
Academy of Athens: Sigmoids
Max Planck Lindau: NLFFF Extrapolations
International team of solar scientists, computer scientists, and expert programmers.
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Automated tracking of the origin, evolution, and disappearance (eruption) of all filaments. Outlines contours, determines chirality, tracks individual filaments, handles mergers and splitting.
)
Filament Tracking (Bernasconi)
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Jet Detection in Coronal Holes (Savcheva)
Jet detection in AIA 193 image; polar coronal hole, close to south pole.
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Sigmoid Sniffer (Raouafi, Georgoulis)
Sigmoids detected with the sigmoid sniffer in a Hinode/XRT image (left) and AIA(right, 94 A). The sigmoid sniffer is set up for both XRT and AIA images.
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Bright Point Detector (Saar, Farid)
Bright Point Detector applied to AIA 193 image. Intensity scaling is logarithmic, detected BPs have been overlayed. Daily summary to HEK, full output in separate catalog.
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
Coronal Dimmings (MWD)
• Dimming is seen as a decrease in intensity in both EUV and X-ray images (e.g., Thompson et al., 1998; Sterling & Hudson, 1997).
• Good correlation with CME events: will serve as SDO CME alert
• Plasma from dimmings makes up (at least part of) the CME mass
Coronal dimming at flux rope footpoints
Coronal dimmings/TCHs
(EIT)
• First space-based observation by Skylab mission (1973-74): “Transient Coronal Holes (TCHs)”
POSSIBLE CAUSES:1. Density depletion due to an evacuation of plasma
along “opened” field lines
2. Temperature variation
Module developed by Gemma Attrill, Alisdair Davey and Meredith Wills-Davey (SAO). Installed in pipeline, needs calibration.
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
What would one use this for?
From the FFT produced metadata, a user can produce with a few IDL line commands information that previously would have taken years to compile, e.g.:
• Draw a butterfly diagram for active regions• Find all filaments that coincide with sigmoids. Correlate sigmoid handedness with filament chirality• Correlate EUV jets with small scale flux emergence in coronal holes only• Draw PIL maps with regions of high shear and large magnetic field gradients overlaid, to pinpoint potential flaring regions. Then correlate with actual flare occurrence.• Produce real time automated space weather alerts and Quicklook data for flares, CME’s, and flux emergence
Computer Vision for Solar PhysicsSDO Science Workshop, May 2011
SDO Feature Finding Team
Team CompositionMSU: Martens (PI), Angryk, Banda*, Schuh*, Atanu*, Atreides* (trainable module)
Harvard-Smithsonian: Kasper (PM), Davey (pipeline, interfaces, hardware), Korreck (documentation, outreach), Grigis, Testa (flares), Saar, Farid* (XRBP’s), Engell* (PILs)
Lockheed-Martin: Timmons (pipeline, interfaces, HEK), Hurlburt
Johns Hopkins-APL: Bernasconi (filaments), Raouafi (sigmoids)
NASA-Marshall: Cirtain (pipeline, interfaces)
Boston University: Savcheva (jets)
SwRI: DeForest, Lamb* (magnetic feature tracking, sunspots, CMEs), Wills-Davey (dimmings, EIT Waves)
Royal Observatory of Belgium: Delouille, Mampaey, Verbeek (Spoca: AR, CHs)
New Mexico State: McAteer (oscillations)
Academy of Athens: Georgoulis (sigmoids, filaments)
Max Planck Lindau: Wiegelmann (full disk NLFFF extrapolations)
International team of solar scientists, computer scientists, and expert programmers.