explanation      blue bibcodes open ADS page with paths to full text
Author name code: durrant
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:"Durrant, Christopher John" 

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.
2009sogr.book.....B    Altcode:
  Preface; Acknowledgements; 1. Historical introduction; 2. The
  morphology, evolution and dynamics of the granulation and
  supergranulation; 3. An introduction to the theory of convection;
  4. The theory of astrophysical convection; Interpretation of the
  granulation and spuergranulation; References; Name index; Subject index.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Loops in the Solar Corona
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C.; Loughhead, R. E.
2006plsc.book.....B    Altcode:
  1. Historical introduction; 2. Cool loops: observed properties; 3. Hot
  loops: observed properties; 4. Flare loops: observed properties;
  5. Structure, dynamics and heating of loops; 6. The plasma loop model
  of the coronae of the sun and stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Mechanism involved in the Reversals of the Sun's Polar
    Magnetic Fields
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Turner, J. P. R.; Wilson, P. R.
2004SoPh..222..345D    Altcode:
  Models of the polarity reversals of the Sun's polar magnetic fields
  based on the surface transport of flux are discussed and are tested
  using observations of the polar fields during Cycle 23 obtained by
  the National Solar Observatory at Kitt Peak. We have extended earlier
  measurements of the net radial flux polewards of ±60° and confirm
  that, despite fluctuations of ∼20%, there is a steady decline in
  the old polarity polar flux which begins shortly after sunspot minimum
  (although not at the same time in each hemisphere), crosses the zero
  level near sunspot maximum, and increases, with reversed polarity
  during the remainder of the cycle. We have also measured the net
  transport of the radial field by both meridional flow and diffusion
  across several latitude zones at various phases of the Cycle. We can
  confirm that there was a net transport of leader flux across the solar
  equator during Cycle 23 and have used statistical tests to show that it
  began during the rising phase of this cycle rather than after sunspot
  maximum. This may explain the early decrease of the mean polar flux
  after sunspot minimum. We also found an outward flow of net flux across
  latitudes ±60° which is consistent with the onset of the decline of
  the old polarity flux. Thus the polar polarity reversals during Cycle
  23 are not inconsistent with the surface flux-transport models but the
  large empirical values required for the magnetic diffusivity require
  further investigation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A method of evolving synoptic maps of the solar magnetic field,
    II. Comparison with observations of the polar fields
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Mccloughan, J.
2004SoPh..219...55D    Altcode:
  We describe the application of the synoptic transport equation
  to simulate the temporal evolution of the magnetic flux over the
  solar surface. This provides a means of predicting each day both the
  synoptic maps for the Carrington rotation starting the next day and
  the instantaneous map of the solar flux over the whole solar surface
  for the next day. The reliability of the predicted synoptic maps is
  tested by comparing the locations of the zero-flux contour with those
  of the observed maps produced by the National Solar Observatory, Kitt
  Peak and with the locations of Hα filaments measured on filtergrams
  obtained by the Big Bear Solar Observatory. We conclude that the best
  match at high latitudes is obtained by long-term simulations (over 20
  rotations) with flux updates each rotation between latitudes ± 60°. We
  illustrate the use of the simulations to describe the evolution of the
  polar fields at the time of the polarity reversals in Cycle 23. The
  reconstruction of the instantaneous maps is tested by comparison with
  full-disk magnetograms. The method provides a simple means of estimating
  the large-scale flux distribution over the whole surface. It does not
  take account of flux emerging after the central meridian passage each
  rotation so it is only approximate in the activity belts but provides
  a reliable map beyond those latitudes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations and Simulations of the Polar Field Reversals in
    Cycle 23
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Wilson, P. R.
2003SoPh..214...23D    Altcode:
  We have used observations obtained by the National Solar Observatory
  at Kitt Peak to study the reversals of the polar magnetic fields in
  Cycle 23. We have compared them with corresponding data obtained by the
  Mt. Wilson Observatory, when these are available, testing both data sets
  against the locations of Hα filaments. Because of the unreliability
  of the data at extreme latitudes and because the apparent time of
  reversal varies with the degree of smoothing applied to the data, it
  is difficult to determine precise reversal time in each hemisphere
  from direct observations. However, we show that it is possible to
  obtain a better-defined and more precise reversal time using polar
  maps derived from simulations of the synoptic fields. These indirect
  values, however, depend critically on the diffusivity used in the
  simulations. We applied various tests to confirm an empirical value for
  the diffusivity parameter of about 600 km<SUP>2</SUP> s<SUP>−1</SUP>
  and hence determined empirical reversal times of CR 1976 in the northern
  hemisphere and CR 1981 in the south.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Polar magnetic fields - Filaments and the zero-flux contour
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
2002SoPh..211...83D    Altcode:
  We investigate the reliability with which magnetograph observations
  of the large-scale polar fields establish the zero-flux contour by
  comparing magnetic maps from various sources with one another and
  with the locations of filament structures seen on the disk in Hα
  filtergrams. The daily MWO and NSOKP magnetograms smoothed over 120
  arc sec provide consistent large-scale zero-flux contours which align
  with the filaments out to heliocentric angles of about 75°. Synoptic
  maps match in regions where the locations of the zero-flux contour and
  of the filaments are maintained for several days. Attention is drawn
  to regions at the tips of unipolar `plumes' and the polar crown gap
  where the contours are variable from day to day; these are tentatively
  identified as regions of active reorganization of large-scale flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Bipolar Magnetic Fields Emerging at High Latitudes
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Turner, J.; Wilson, P. R.
2002SoPh..211..103D    Altcode:
  Three examples of the unusual development of high-latitude large-scale
  features during cycle 23 are described. These features are found in
  synoptic plots constructed using data obtained at both the NSOKP and
  the MWO Observatories. Several properties of these features cannot
  be reproduced in direct simulations using a modified form of the
  flux-transport equation appropriate for synoptic fields and it is
  inferred that their evolution is not due solely to the advection
  and diffusion of decaying active region fields. The analysis shows
  that one feature may be related to a high-latitude bipolar region
  which emerged in an earlier rotation. By imposing the locations
  of Hα filaments on enlargements of the NSOKP daily magnetograms,
  we can identify the location of the other features and study their
  structure at high resolution. This suggests that they are related to
  the emergence of small magnetic knots at high latitudes. By repeating
  the simulations including overlays of non-random patterns of bipoles
  emerging at appropriate times during the simulations, it is possible
  to study the effects of different patterns and to reproduce some
  of the qualitative properties of these features not present in the
  direct simulations. These results support Stenflo's contention that
  `quite minute deviations from a random distribution (in the emergence
  of small-scale fields) would suffice for these fields to have global
  effects'.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A method of evolving synoptic maps of the solar magnetic field
Authors: McCloughan, J.; Durrant, C. J.
2002SoPh..211...53M    Altcode:
  The evolution of magnetic flux at the solar surface is widely modeled by
  the flux transport equation. This describes the distribution of flux
  from instant to instant over the whole surface but does not describe
  how the synoptic map for one Carrington rotation evolves into the
  synoptic map for the next rotation. We derive the correct synoptic
  evolution equation, show that a simple version yields extremely accurate
  predictions of synoptic maps and discuss the implications for previous
  studies of the evolution of surface magnetic structures. We also note
  that the procedure yields a method of reconstructing an approximate
  map of the flux over the whole surface at any instant.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-resolution Studies of the Polar Magnetic Fields during
    Cycle 23
Authors: Varsik, J.; Durrant, C. J.; Turner, J.; Wilson, P. R.
2002SoPh..205..231V    Altcode:
  High-resolution mosaics of the solar polar magnetic fields have been
  constructed using individual magnetograms obtained with the video
  magnetograph of the Big Bear Solar Observatory, and the properties
  of these mosaics are demonstrated in this paper. The mosaics show
  selected regions of the polar fields on several days during the rising
  phase of Cycle 23, and are related to the global polar fields (i)
  by superposing the mosaic for a given day on to a full-disk SOHO-MDI
  magnetogram obtained on the same day, (ii) by plotting the mosaics in
  polar projection and using these to identify the approximate regions
  reported by the mosaics on the NSOKP polar synoptic plots, and (iii)
  by imposing the locations of the Hα filaments on to the mosaics in
  order to infer the neutral lines of the large-scale fields. We have
  studied the fine structure of the large-scale unipolar fields near the
  poles and, in particular, have constructed histograms of the magnetic
  field intensities within particular regions of the mosaics and, in
  this way, have estimated the ratios of the number of magnetic knots of
  opposite polarities within the unipolar plumes. We have also generated
  enlargements of the polar regions of the NSOKP daily magnetograms. These
  and statistical studies have shown that on days for which the BBSO
  mosaics are not available, the NSOKP enlargements may be used to study
  the high-resolution polar fields. Time-series of mosaics obtained over
  four-hour periods on September 6 and November 18 show that considerable
  evolution in the structure of existing flux knots and the formation
  of several new knots has taken place during these periods.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evolution of Trailing Plumes from Active Regions
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Kress, J. M.; Wilson, P. R.
2001SoPh..201...57D    Altcode:
  We have studied the evolution of several high-latitude flux `plumes',
  i.e., unipolar regions, trailing from active regions which emerged
  near sunspot maximum in cycle 23. The observed patterns are compared
  with simulations using a simple flux transport equation based on the
  observed flux for an earlier Carrington rotation. In addition to the
  long recognized poleward migration and diffusion of flux from active
  regions, it is found that the evolution of the trailing plumes may
  be influenced by flux which emerges above latitude 35° over areas of
  all scales. We describe two cases in which the emerging flux appears
  in the form of bipolar flux patterns which are not obviously related
  to sunspots. Further, we find instances in which the observed surface
  flux decreases or spreads at rates which cannot be explained solely in
  terms of diffusion using the normally accepted rates. Thus in several
  cases the poleward migration of flux cannot be described in terms
  of passive transport by advection and diffusion as considered here,
  and further investigation of the processes that contribute to the
  evolution of the polar fields is required.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal Loops
Authors: Durrant, C.
2000eaa..bookE2270D    Altcode:
  Large volumes of the solar CORONA are seen to contain long curved
  features stretching upwards from the CHROMOSPHERE. Many arch back
  to the chromosphere, forming a closed loop within the corona. These
  structures, whether closed or not, are known as coronal loops. The
  geometry of these loops is determined by that of the solar magnetic
  field which pervades the corona. Nearly all coronal loops contai...

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Landolt-Börnstein: Numerical Data and Functional Relationships
    in Science and Technology - New Series " Gruppe/Group 6 Astronomy and
Astrophysics " Volume 3 Voigt: Astronomy and Astrophysics. Extension
    and Supplement to Volume 2 " Instruments, Methods, Solar System
Authors: Baars, J. W.; Beer, H.; Durrant, C. J.; Graser, U.; Guinot,
   B.; Hoffmann, M.; Hopp, U.; Ip, W. -H.; Jessberger, E. K.; Klecker, B.;
   Lemke, D.; Meisenheimer, K.; Möbius, E.; Palme, H.; Rahe, J.; Röser,
   H. J.; Schubart, J.; Schwenn, R.; Solf, J.; Soltau, G.; Staubert,
   R.; Stewart, R.; Trümper, J.; Vanysek, V.; Weigelt, G.; Wolf, R.
1993lbor.book.....B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - Plasma Loops in the Solar Corona
Authors: Bray, B. J.; Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Loughhead, R. E.;
   Cheng, C. C.
1993SSRv...65..185B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - Plasma Loops in the Solar Corona
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Loughhead, R. E.;
   Kleczek, J.
1992SoPh..138..423B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Loops in the Solar Corona
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C.; Loughhead, R. E.
1991plsc.book.....B    Altcode: 1991QB529.P57......
  A comprehensive account of the properties of plasma loops, the
  fundamental structural elements of the solar corona. Plasma loops
  cover a wide range of sizes and range in temperature from tens of
  thousands to millions of degrees. They not only define the structure of
  individual active regions but connect different active regions--even
  across the solar equator. Loops also play an integral and decisive
  role in the enormous solar explosions called flares. Over recent
  years a wealth of space and ground-based observations of loops has
  been obtained in various widely-spaced regions of the electromagnetic
  spectrum. In this book the authors have selected the best observational
  material from the literature on which to base a detailed account of
  the properties of flare and non-flare loops. The book also explores
  the larger implications of the loop structures for our understanding
  of solar and stellar coronae. The text is enhanced by a large number
  of illustrations and unique and beautiful photographs obtained from
  the ground and from space.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Atmosphere of the Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Valnicek, B.
1991SSRv...56..419D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma loops in the solar corona.
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Loughhead, R. E.
1991CAS....18.....B    Altcode:
  This book presents the first comprehensive account of the properties
  of plasma loops, the fundamental structural elements of the solar
  corona. Plasma loops not only define the structure of individual
  active regions but connect different active regions. Loops also play an
  integral and decisive role in solar flares. The authors have selected
  the best observational material from the literature on which to base a
  detailed account of the properties of flare and non-flare loops. The
  book also explores the larger implications of the loop structures in
  our understanding of solar and stellar coronae. The text is enhanced
  by a large number of illustrations and photographs obtained from the
  ground and from space.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modelling Coronal Active Region Emission Patterns (With
    1 Figure)
Authors: Brown, S. F.; Durrant, C. J.
1991mcch.conf..132B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Outstanding Theoretical Problems
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1990IAUS..138..489D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Corrigenda - Linear Force-Free Magnetic Fields and Coronal
    Models
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1990AuJPh..43..813D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Atmosphere of the Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Jordan, C.
1989Obs...109..122D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Atmosphere of the Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1989S&T....77..619D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Stokes Profile Analysis and Vector Magnetic Fields. II. Formal
    Numerical Solutions of the Stokes Transfer Equations
Authors: Rees, D. E.; Murphy, G. A.; Durrant, C. J.
1989ApJ...339.1093R    Altcode:
  Two numerical methods for formal integration of the Stokes transfer
  equations for line formation in a strong magnetic field were tested by
  computing Stokes profiles for a Zeeman triplet in a Milne-Eddington
  model atmosphere, and for the anomalously split Ca II K line in a
  realistic solar model. The first method is a Feautrier (1964) type
  method, in which the equations are written in second-order form and
  solved by finite-differences. The second method is a new solution
  called DELO, in which an integral equation for the Stokes vector is
  formulated in terms of the lambda operator (LO) associated with the
  diagonal elements (DE) of the absorption matrix. It is shown that the
  DELO method is faster and more accurate than the Feautrier method, and
  that both methods are more efficient than the Runge-Kutta integration
  method.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Atmosphere of the Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Brown, J. C.
1989Natur.338..179D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Atmosphere of the Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Bachmann, G.
1989AN....310..357D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Linear force-free magnetic fields and coronal models
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1989AuJPh..42..317D    Altcode:
  The mathematical properties of linear force-free fields generated
  by the Helmholtz equation are reviewed, and the solutions in terms
  of spherical, Cartesian and cylindrical coordinate systems are
  discussed. When only the normal component of the field on a single
  (photospheric) surface is available as a boundary condition, the
  solutions are not uniquely determined. If further conditions are
  imposed, solutions may be unique or multiple or may not exist. The
  limitations of various methods of modeling the coronal magnetic field
  of the sun using linear force-free fields are exposed. A new upper
  boundary condition is proposed that guarantees a unique solution,
  and takes account of the solar wind effects in a manner as closely
  analogous as possible to that used in potential field modeling.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coronal loops in solar active regions
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Brown, S. F.
1989PASA....8..137D    Altcode: 1989PASAu...8..137D
  The appearance of solar active regions as seen in EUV line radiation
  is discussed in terms of a system of simple static coronal loop
  models. The loop models are based on those of Rosner et al. (1978)
  and may be understood in terms of the scaling laws introduced by
  these authors. Some generalized scaling laws are presented which
  demonstrate that the global properties of loops in fixed length are
  insensitive to everything but the overall heating rate or the basal
  pressure. The model and scaling laws appear to describe hot loops
  well. Empirically determined temperatures and densities in cooler
  loops are not in agreement with coronal loop models. A simple model of
  an active region is computed using a dipole magnetic structure. The
  individual loop structures were calculated on the basis of the two
  different assumptions of constant basal pressure and of constant heating
  rate. This paper presents a preliminary discussion of the results and
  a comparison with observation

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Overshoot of horizontal and vertical velocities in the deep
    solar photosphere
Authors: Nesis, A.; Mattig, W.; Durrant, C. J.
1988A&A...201..153N    Altcode:
  The authors present the results of a coherence analysis of the
  centre-to-limb behaviour of the small-scale intensity and velocity
  fluctuations. The vertical velocity is coherent throughout the
  low-middle photosphere and is correlated with the continuum intensity
  variations. The horizontal velocity variations are not coherent with the
  intensity variations, and with the vertical velocity variations. The
  horizontal velocity is coherent only in the low atmosphere. Thus the
  horizontal motion is independent from the vertical motion and is not
  of convective nature.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The atmosphere of the sun
Authors: Durrant, Christopher John
1988atsu.book.....D    Altcode: 1988QB528.D87......
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Weiss, N. O.
1985SoPh...96..423B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation - ED.2
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Waddington,
   W. G.
1985Obs...105...18B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Global oscillations and active regions
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1985AuJPh..38..839D    Altcode:
  The author presents further estimates of the amplitude of the
  modulation of the solar global velocity signal caused by the passage
  of active regions across the solar disc. Using measurements of the
  profile of the K I λ769.9 nm line in the quiet sun and in plages
  he finds a global velocity variation of ≡2 m s<SUP>-1</SUP> during
  the transit of a typical active region of area 3300 millionths of the
  hemisphere. However, during the period in which a velocity amplitude of
  6 m s<SUP>-1</SUP> was reported by Claverie et al. (1982), the sunspot
  areas were exceptionally large and the author confirms Schröter's
  (1984) result that the combination of spot and plage contributions is
  sufficient to account for the observed signal. The velocity modulation
  is thus attributable to surface inhomogeneities, not to the structure
  of the solar core.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Kleczek, J.
1984Ap&SS.103..410B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation - ED.2
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.
1984JBAA...94R.196B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Nonlinear two-dimensional dynamics of stellar atmospheres. I -
    A computational code
Authors: Stefanik, R. P.; Ulmschneider, P.; Hammer, R.; Durrant, C. J.
1984A&A...134...77S    Altcode:
  The authors present a computational code that allows the nonlinear
  equations of motion for a compressible fluid to be solved. Earlier
  work on one-dimensional problems using the method of characteristics
  is generalised to two dimensions employing cylindrical geometry. The
  scheme is described in detail and its effectiveness is demonstrated
  using analytic examples of small-amplitude motion in an isothermal,
  stably stratified, atmosphere. The code is designed specifically to
  handle the problem of the overshoot and decay of convective motion
  in stellar atmospheres and their coupling to acoustic and internal
  wave fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Geometrical Effects in Weighting Functions
Authors: Kaisig, M.; Durrant, C. J.
1984ssdp.conf..406K    Altcode:
  Weighting functions of the first and second order facilitate the
  analysis of solar fine structure observed with high and low spatial
  resolution, respectively. The authors generalize these functions
  to permit their use near the solar limb away from disk center, and
  demonstrate how the varying solar parameters along the line-of-sight
  lead to geometrical smearing of the observed fluctuations and to
  correlated contributions by the horizontal velocity component.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Studies of Overshoot
Authors: Nesis, A.; Durrant, C. J.; Mattig, W.
1984ssdp.conf..243N    Altcode:
  The authors present the results of a power and coherence analysis
  of the centre-to-limb behavior of the small-scale intensity and
  velocity fluctuations. The vertical velocity is coherent throughout the
  low-middle photosphere and is correlated with the continuum brightness
  pattern. The horizontal velocity pattern is not coherent with the
  vertical velocity and brightness patterns indicating lack of horizontal
  heat transport. The horizontal velocity patterns are coherent only in
  the low atmosphere. The mechanism causing the breakdown of coherence
  may be a property of the convective flow or the intrusion of a gravity
  wave field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Interpretation of Low Resolution Observations (Keynote)
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1984ssdp.conf..345D    Altcode:
  The information content of low resolution observations is discussed
  mainly in terms of the diagnositic properties of line profiles formed
  in atmospheres with small fluctuations about the mean.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Nordlund, A.
1984SSRv...39R.222B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.
1984S&T....68T.426B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Asymmetry of Photospheric Absorption Lines in Quiet and
    Active Regions of the Sun
Authors: Kaisig, M.; Durrant, C. J.; Schroter, E. H.
1984ssdp.conf..360K    Altcode:
  Photoelectric scans of Fe I lines in quiet and active regions of the
  sun yield significant differences of the line asymmetry and wavelength
  shifts of the line centers. These differences are interpreted
  in terms of a modification of the hydrodynamic structure beneath
  Ca<SUP>+</SUP>-plage regions. To demonstrate this, the authors used a
  second-order perturbation analysis and the classical "two-stream model".

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Suggestions for future investigations
Authors: Roberts, B.; Einaudi, G.; Toricelli, G.; Cargill, P.; Durrant,
   C. J.
1984ost1.conf..183R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The solar granulation Durrant.
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.
1984cup..book.....B    Altcode:
  A comprehensive account of observational and theoretical knowledge
  of solar granulation is presented. A historical introduction to
  the solar granulation is given, and the morphology, evolution,
  and dynamics of granulation and supergranulation are discussed. The
  theory of convection is introduced, and the theory of astrophysical
  convection is addressed. Finally, the interpretation of granulation
  and supergranulation is considered.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The analysis of solar limb observations. III - Geometrical
    effects in weighting functions
Authors: Kaisig, M.; Durrant, C. J.
1984A&A...130..171K    Altcode:
  Weighting functions of the first and second order facilitate the
  analysis of solar fine structure observed with high and low spatial
  resolution, respectively. The authors generalize these functions to
  permit their use towards the solar limb and demonstrate how the varying
  solar parameters along the line of sight lead to geometrical smearing
  of the observed fluctuations and to correlated contributions by the
  horizontal velocity component.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar active regions: observation and theory.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1984ost1.conf...21D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book-Review - the Solar Granulation
Authors: Bray, R. J.; Loughhead, R. E.; Durrant, C. J.
1984AExpr...1S..39B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Balloon-borne imagery of the solar granulation. IV - The
    centre-to-limb variation of the intensity fluctuations
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Mattig, W.; Nesis, A.; Schmidt, W.
1983A&A...123..319D    Altcode:
  A reanalysis of the white-light photographs of the granulation obtained
  during the flight of the balloon-borne Spektrostratoskop experiment
  is presented. A detailed examination of the power spectra of the
  intensity fluctuations at various times during the flight reveals a
  steady increase in a straylight and a substantial degree of astigmatism
  that changed with the focus setting. Allowing for the latter and
  normalizing all measurements to that with the least straylight, the
  rms relative intensity fluctuation at the center of the disk at 556 nm
  is increased from the previously reported value of 8.6 percent to 11.3
  percent. The overall change of rms fluctuation from the center of the
  disk to 0.3 micron is remarkably small, dropping some 10 percent. The
  results agree quite well with those of the Soviet Solar Stratospheric
  Observatory, when corrected roughly for instrumental degradation, and
  with a granulation model in which the granular temperature perturbation
  cuts off at a height of 35 km in the atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar global velocity oscillations and active region rotation
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Schroeter, E. H.
1983Natur.301..589D    Altcode:
  Claverie et al.<SUP>1</SUP> have recently reported the detection
  of an approximately 13-day periodicity in measurements of the mean
  Doppler velocity shift of the integrated solar disk. They attribute
  this signal to the presence of a rapidly rotating core. Here we draw
  attention to the close correlation between this periodicity and the
  rotation of solar active regions across the disk. The presence of
  an active region should modulate the measured velocities due to the
  temperature sensitivity of the line measured. It seems likely that
  this is the origin of the signal observed by Claverie et al.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Die Mitte-Rand-Variation des granularen Geschwindigkeitsfeldes
Authors: Nesis, A.; Durrant, C. J.; Mattig, W.
1983MitAG..60..279N    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The asymmetry of photospheric absorption lines. I - an analysis
    of mean solar line profiles
Authors: Kaisig, M.; Durrant, C. J.
1982A&A...116..332K    Altcode:
  The paper investigates the information content of the shifts and
  asymmetries of mean line profiles and analyzes in detail, with the
  aid of a perturbation analysis and a two-stream model, that of the
  solar spectrum observed at the center of the disk. It is shown that the
  characteristic C-shape of the line bisectors depends mainly on the run
  of temperature fluctuations, correlated with velocities, in combination
  with the temperature-dependent opacities. The degree of asymmetry (and
  shift) is not only a function of the one-point correlation between
  temperature and velocity - which measures the convective flux but
  depends also strongly on two-point correlations. The latter can produce
  an asymmetry in the absence of heat transport along the line of sight -
  at the limb, for instance. The usefulness of measurements of mean line
  profiles as a test of convective models is demonstrated by examining
  the general characteristics of the asymmetry of the Fe I 7557.6 nm
  line in both the sun and examples of other main-sequence stars.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectral line transfer effects in Lambdameter measurements
    of solar short-period oscillations
Authors: Deubner, F. -L.; Durrant, C. J.; Kaltenbacher, J.
1982A&A...114...85D    Altcode:
  Lambdameter records with different exit-slit settings yield power
  spectra of short period oscillations in the solar atmosphere, observed
  in the Na D(1) line and medium strong Fe I line, whose structure
  is notably stable with regard to slit geometry changes. By means of
  short period wavetrain numerical modeling, it is demonstrated that
  while such a structure in the power spectra of photospheric lines
  is absent for rms wave amplitudes lower than about 0.1 km/sec, it
  emerges with higher amplitudes as a consequence of nonlinearities in
  the line transfer process. It is emphasized that the nonlinear effect
  presently investigated must also be considered in stronger chromospheric
  lines. Linear correction factors cannot be applied to the observed power
  in order to deduce the energy flux carried by the acoustic waves if
  nonlinear effects are the only source of the observed spectral pattern.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vertical structure of the solar photosphere. II - The
    small-scale velocity field
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Nesis, A.
1982A&A...111..272D    Altcode:
  Measurements of solar line shifts in spectra obtained during the
  Spektrostratoskop balloon flight of 1975 are described. By averaging
  the shifts of several lines, the noise level that is particularly
  apparent in measurements of single weak lines is strongly reduced,
  and line shift measurements extremely close to the continuum level are
  possible. An account is given of two investigations. In the first,
  oscillations are removed by spatial filtering, and the probability
  density distribution of the velocity field is then compared with that of
  the continuum brightness fluctuations, that is, the granulation. The
  histograms for brightness and velocity in the deepest atmospheric
  layers are very similar, and they show a consistent departure from a
  normal distribution. In the upper atmosphere, the velocity histogram
  is more variable, and systematic behavior is not observed. In the
  other investigation, the correlation between the velocity fields at
  different levels and between the velocity and brightness field at the
  base of the atmosphere is studied by means of a coherence analysis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vertikale Struktur der solaren Photosphäre II. Das
    Geschwindigkeitsfeld kleiner räumlicher Strukturen
Authors: Nesis, A.; Durrant, C. J.
1982MitAG..55...92N    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The analysis of solar limb observations. I - Restoration of
    data in a tilted reference frame
Authors: Wiesmeier, A.; Durrant, C. J.
1981A&A...104..207W    Altcode:
  Expressions are derived for the correction of the statistical
  properties of two-dimensional fields degraded by arbitrary (without
  axial symmetry) point-spread functions. Attention is given to both
  oneand two-dimensional sampling. A number of earlier estimates of
  corrections to observations of brightness and volocity fluctuations away
  from the center of the solar disk are shown to be in error. Corrected
  values are reported of the rms granular brightness fluctuations as a
  function of heliocentric angle.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The analysis of solar limb observations. II - Geometrical
    smearing
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Kneer, F.; Maluck, G.
1981A&A...104..211D    Altcode:
  Center-of-disk and limb observations of photospheric brightness
  fluctuations reveal a systematic suppression of the values at the
  limb. This is a geometrical effect arising from the line of sight at the
  limb passing through various structures across the surface. This effect
  is examined here in the light of recent granular temperature models
  using a simple model incorporating the dominant granular scale. The
  geometry is found to have little influence on the deep-seated granular
  brightness field but to strongly suppress the brightness fluctuations
  caused by the upper photospheric temperature field. The significance
  of these results for the restoration of limb observations is discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Hope yet for a chromospheric model!
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1981SSRv...29..357D    Altcode:
  Current chromospheric models are briefly reviewed with particular
  emphasis on the inadequacy of the dynamical description. Whilst an
  improvement in models of the gross structure seems possible with present
  knowledge, a fully self-consistent model, of the upper chromosphere
  in particular, requires the better empirical understanding that awaits
  a space observing facility.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Konvektion in der Sonnenatmosphäre.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Nesis, A.
1981S&W....20..405D    Altcode:
  Convection, in addition to radiation, plays an important role in
  the processes involved in the transportation of energy from the solar
  interior to the solar surface. The solar convection zone begins directly
  below the photosphere and, extending into the solar interior, covers
  approximately one-third of the solar radius. An investigation of the
  convection zone is only possible for its upper boundary layer. Of
  particular interest in this area is the granulation phenomenon. The
  dynamics of the solar photosphere are discussed. The velocity field
  can be studied with the aid of the Doppler shift. Attention is given to
  the extension of the area in which the transport of heat takes place as
  consequence of motions in the photosphere. Two spectral areas are used
  in an investigation conducted to obtain values regarding the intensity
  of large structures. Measurements of the Doppler shift were also
  carried out. The obtained results show that the brightness and velocity
  variations of the lowest photospheric layers are of convective origin.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Determination of microturbulent velocities in early-type stars
Authors: Dufton, P. L.; Durrant, C. J.; Durrant, A. C.
1981A&A....97...10D    Altcode:
  In the case of B-type stars, microturbulent velocities are often derived
  from the requirement that abundances estimated from individual lines
  show no systematic variation with line strength. It is demonstrated
  that this method results in an overestimate of the microturbulent
  velocity. For high-quality equivalent widths, the systematic error is
  found to be approximately 2 km/sec; for less accurate observational
  data, the error is larger.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vertical structure of the solar photosphere
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Nesis, A.
1981A&A....95..221D    Altcode:
  Observations of intensity structures seen in the wings of the Mg b2 line
  from both quiet and active regions of the sun are presented. A linear
  statistical analysis indicates that at least three distinct intensity
  (temperature) components are present: a very low photospheric component
  seen at all scales, and two components in the upper atmosphere,
  one in the high photosphere at scales smaller than 5 arcsec in the
  quiet atmosphere and one in the middle-high photosphere at larger
  scales. Only the former is strictly granulation. The physical processes
  underlying each component in quiet regions are tentatively identified
  as convection, gravity waves and network. Active regions appear to
  differ only in the relative contribution of these components.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Landolt-Börnstein. Numerical data and functional
relationships in science and technology. New series. Group VI:
    Astronomy, astrophysics and space research. Volume_2. Astronomy and
astrophysics. Extension and supplement to Volume_1. Subvolume a:
    methods - constants - solar system.
Authors: Hellwege, K. -H.; Schaifers, K.; Voigt, H. H.; Wolf, R.;
   Durrant, C. J.; Behr, A.; West, R. M.; Solf, J.; Weigelt, G.; Schmahl,
   G.; Staubert, R.; Trümper, J.; Lemke, D.; Hachenberg, O.; Enslin, H.;
   Fricke, W.; Bruzek, A.; Gondolatsch, F.; Ip, W. -H.; Axford, W. I.;
   Schubart, J.; Jessberger, E. K.; Rahe, J.; Fechtig, H.; Leinert, C.;
   Grün, E.; Pilipp, W.; Scholer, M.; Palme, H.; Suess, H. E.; Zeh,
   H. D.; Kirsten, T.
1981lndf.book.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small-scale velocity fields and mean line profiles
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1980A&A....91..251D    Altcode:
  The mean equation of transfer for a line formed in the presence of a
  small-scale velocity field is derived. Approximate expressions for
  effects arising from fluctuating quantities are illustrated by the
  case of short-period waves; correlations between fluctuations are taken
  into account. It is shown that mean line profiles are best generated by
  averaging the time variation of accurate individual profile sequences.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Some more effects of waves on spectral line analysis
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1980A&A....89...80D    Altcode:
  The effects on spectral line shifts due to velocity-correlated opacity
  and source function fluctuations in waves are discussed in the context
  of a simple exponential atmospheric model. These correlations contribute
  a steady net line shift and, if the velocity amplitude is small enough,
  a small correction to the fluctuating component of the shift. Also
  noted are the minor changes in the form of the line shift reflecting
  height-dependent velocity amplitudes and nonlinear source functions. The
  results and limitations of the model are discussed with reference
  to the large-amplitude calculations of Cram et al. (1979) and the
  estimates of the high frequency power in the sun made by Deubner (1976).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The effect of waves on spectral line analysis in the Fourier
    domain.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1979A&A....76..208D    Altcode:
  An attempt is made to discuss an analysis of Fourier transforms of
  wave-broadened spectral-line profiles in terms of microturbulence
  and total velocity field. Synthetic line profiles are calculated
  numerically and analyzed by following the procedures outlined by Gray
  (1975, 1976). It is concluded that: (1) the presence of a progressive
  wave field cannot be diagnosed directly from a mean line transform; (2)
  the microvelocity field derived in the Fourier domain by matching the
  position of the first minimum is strongly dependent on line strength;
  (3) the Fourier microfield and classical microturbulence are identical
  only for very strong lines lying at the upper end of the first portion
  of the curve of growth; (4) the residual macrovelocity transform
  is not simply describable by commonly used functions; and (5) the
  macrovelocity parameters can be overestimated or underestimated unless
  caution is exercised.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The effect of waves on spectral line analysis.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1979A&A....73..137D    Altcode:
  A simple analytical model is developed for the instantaneous effect
  of a wave train on spectral lines of arbitrary strength and shape. The
  most important proviso of this model is that the velocity disturbance
  must be small in comparison with the thermal Doppler line width. The
  model is used to investigate the diagnostic value of various methods
  of spectral-line analysis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Studies of granular velocities. VIII. The height dependence
    of the vertical granular velocity component.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Mattig, W.; Nesis, A.; Reiss, G.; Schmidt, W.
1979SoPh...61..251D    Altcode:
  Spectral observations of solar velocity fields made during a partial
  solar eclipse are described. Continuum intensity measurements at
  the lunar limb allow the modulation transfer function to be derived
  and the true spatial power spectrum of the velocity field to be
  reconstructed. The oscillatory and granular components are separated
  by applying spatial filters cutting off at 3″.7. The oscillatory
  component values are in good agreement with those of Canfield (1976) but
  the granular component has substantially more power and a smaller height
  gradient. The discrepancy can be resolved by noting the uncertainties
  of the seeing corrections and of the separation into components in
  the work of Canfield.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Die Höhenabhängigkeit der vertikalen granularen
    Geschwindigkeitskomponente
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Mattig, W.; Nesis, A.; Reiss, R.; Schmidt, W.
1979MitAG..45..149D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Chromosphere - still enigmatic?
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1978QJRAS..19..411D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Some comments on Suemoto's paper "An empirical, statistical
    model for the formation of the cores of chromospheric Fraunhofer
    lines".
Authors: Cram, L. E.; Durrant, C. J.; Grossmann-Doerth, U.
1978SoPh...58..279C    Altcode:
  We discuss a recent model for the solar chromosphere proposed by Suemoto
  (Solar Phys.54, 3). We conclude that the model is incompatible with the
  basic constraints imposed by high resolution observations and by line
  formation theory, and that consequently the model does not adequately
  describe the solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: a Model for Diagnosing Stellar Velocity Fields
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1978hrs..conf..474D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Illustrated glossary for solar and solar terrestrial physics
Authors: Bruzek, A.; Durrant, C. J.
1977ASSL...69.....B    Altcode: 1977igss.conf.....B; 1977assl...69.....B
  This book collects all terms of relevance to solar and solar-terrestrial
  physics that appear in current English-language literature. Each
  term or group of related terms is given a concise phenomenological
  and quantitative description, including the relationship to other
  phenomena and an interpretation in terms of physical processes. The
  major topics of the glossary encompass the solar interior, the solar
  cycle, solar rotation, large-scale circulation, nonspot magnetic
  fields, the quiet photosphere and chromosphere, the transition
  region, the solar corona, active regions, spots and faculae, flares
  and associated phenomena, prominences, solar radio emission, the
  solar wind and interplanetary medium, solar-terrestrial physics,
  and general theoretical terms. Specific terms defined include solar
  neutrinos, convective theory, the solar activity cycle, dynamos,
  the general solar magnetic field, the quiet sun, granulation and
  supergranulation, coronal holes, sunspot groups, solar activity
  indexes, the Evershed and Wilson effects, X-ray flares, EUV bursts,
  particle flares, prominence phenomenology, radio noise storms, solar
  radio bursts, macro/microturbulence, solar-wind models, geomagnetic
  indexes, geomagnetic storms, radiation belts, and aurorae.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flows in magnetic flux tubes.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1977IAUS...62..267D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: General Theoretical Terms
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1977ASSL...69..139D    Altcode: 1977igss.conf..139D
  Anomalous Dispersion Contrast Mechanisms Dynamical Stability Hanle
  Effect or Level Crossing Interference Lighthill Mechanism Line
  Control Macro/Microturbulence Magnetic Buoyancy Non-Thermal Velocities
  Overstability Penetrative Convection or Overshoot Rotational Braking
  Source Function Thermodynamic Equilibrium Turbulence Waves Wave
  Tunnelling

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Interior
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Roxburgh, I. W.
1977ASSL...69....1D    Altcode: 1977igss.conf....1D
  Solar Standard Model Internal Rotation Energy Generation Solar Neutrinos
  Convection Zone Convective Theory Boussinesq Assumption

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The sun's chromospheric velocity field as inferred from the
    Ca II K line.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Grossmann-Doerth, U.; Kneer, F. J.
1976A&A....51...95D    Altcode:
  Theory and observation of the solar Ca II K line under high spatial
  resolution are briefly reviewed. It is shown that contrary to popular
  belief, present theory is not capable of explaining the observed
  features of the K line. An attempt is made to develop a schematic model
  of the temporal behavior of the spatially resolved K line, based on
  Leibacher's (1971) investigation of waves in the solar atmosphere

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar activity (Activité solaire).
Authors: Newkirk, G.; Dunn, R. B.; Mehltretter, P.; MacQueen, R.;
   Bonnet, R. M.; White, O. R.; Fokker, A. D.; Zwaan, C.; Bruzek, A.;
   Durrant, C.; Grossmann-Doerth, U.; Mehltretter, J. P.; Svestka, Z.;
   de Feiter, L. D.; Tandberg-Hanssen, E.; Howard, R.; Stix, M.; Pneuman,
   G. W.; Hundhausen, A. J.; Sawyer, C.; Simon, P.
1976IAUTA..16b..13N    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectroscopic Investigation of the Chromosphere. IV: A
    Reassessment of the Cloud Model
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1975SoPh...44...41D    Altcode:
  The cloud model employed in the analysis of chromospheric contrast
  profiles is subject to two criticisms. The source function in
  the cloud may not be varied independently of the Doppler width in
  the case of Hα and the radiative coupling between the cloud and
  the underlying atmosphere cannot be ignored. These criticisms are
  investigated quantitatively with two simple extreme models. It is
  found that by taking account of both effects the cloud model may be
  reinstated. Observed chromospheric features may be understood in terms
  of clouds of varying parameters embedded in the uppermost regions of
  a generally undisturbed homogeneous atmosphere. The variable cloud
  parameters are the optical thickness, the Doppler width, the bulk
  velocity and the angular size viewed from the line forming regions of
  the underlying atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Appearance of Chromospheric Structures in Hα
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1975MitAG..36..139D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Book Review: The Quiet Sun
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1974JATP...36..909D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Shock Wave Dissipation in Magnetically Active Regions
Authors: Durrant, C. J.; Michalitsanos, Andrew G.
1971SoPh...18...60D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetographic and Spectrographic Observations of Weakly
    Active Regions
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1971IAUS...43..268D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rotation and chemical abundances in the peculiar A stars - I.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1970MNRAS.147...59D    Altcode:
  The classifications and atmospheric structures displayed by early type
  peculiar stellar spectra are compared empirically with those of normal
  stars. It is concluded that the structures of the metal line forming
  regions of the atmospheres of the peculiar A and B stars are identical
  with those of the normal stars of the same hydrogen type. A consistent
  temperature sequence can be established for both types later than
  spectral type B . The differences in metal line strengths in stars
  of similar hydrogen type can be interpreted only as differences of
  abundance in the atmospheres.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rotation and chemical abundances in the peculiar A stars - II.
Authors: Durrant, C. J.
1970MNRAS.147...75D    Altcode:
  New measurements of the distribution of silicon line strengths amongst
  early type stars having similar atmospheric structures do not allow
  a clear-cut separation into normal and anomalous types. It is shown
  that those stars having line strengths much larger than the mean
  tend to have rotational velocities less than 200 km -1 It is likely
  that in many, if not most, strong-line stars no single temperature
  and pressure parameters will suffice to describe the atmosphere, and
  the assumption of a mean temperature can lead to large errors in the
  derived abundances of all but a few elements. The production of stars
  described by the oblique rotator model is discussed briefly.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rotation and chemical abundances in the peculiar A stars
Authors: Durrant, Christopher John
1968PhDT........80D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS