explanation      blue bibcodes open ADS page with paths to full text
Author name code: jefferies-stuart
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
=author:"Jefferies, S.M." OR =author:"Jefferies, Stuart M." 

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Title: Moving Speckle Imaging into New Frontiers
Authors: Martinez, Arturo O.; Hope, Douglas A.; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   Howell, Steve B.; Baron, Fabien R.
2022AAS...24030205M    Altcode:
  A common method used in speckle interferometric analysis is based on
  a series of temporal correlations between Fourier components of short
  exposure images. We present results on the next advancement beyond
  speckle interferometry that uses multi-frame blind deconvolution (MFBD)
  algorithm to detect closely spaced objects with high-contrast ratios,
  such as faint binary companions. MFBD estimates the parameters that
  describe the object and the point-spread functions (PSFs) and uses
  physical constraints to increase the fidelity of these parameter
  estimates. However, detecting faint companions requires large volumes
  of data, typically thousands of frames. Numerical algorithms such
  as MFBD require minimizing an error metric between the modeled data
  and actual imagery which requires solving a set of parameters that
  describe the blur in the image and the object scene. In large data sets,
  parameter space becomes heavily pocketed with local minima, which can
  typically cause MFBD algorithms to stagnate and fail to find reasonable
  approximate physical solutions that describe faint companions within
  the image. We present a compact MFBD (CMFBD) method as a preliminary
  step before using MFBD that uses consistency constraints imposed
  on the data from turbulence-induced temporal correlations to move
  the parameter space closer to the global minimum. We show images of
  various examples of restorations of objects and compare our results to
  those produced from conventional speckle interferometric methods. Even
  though CMFBD/MFBD is at the frontier of speckle image restoration,
  we plan to improve upon the MFBD algorithm in the near future by
  introducing the use of alternating direction method of multipliers
  (ADMM) to improve object and PSF estimation by enforcing physical
  constraints on sparsity and smoothness in the object, and wavelength
  diversity as a constraint of the estimated PSFs. ADMM techniques can
  cascade penalty functions and can leverage on the PSF in multiple ways,
  simultaneously, for better recovery of the true object.

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Title: PMODE I: Design and Development of an Observatory for
    Characterizing Giant Planet Atmospheres and Interiors
Authors: Shaw, Cody L.; Gulledge, Deborah J.; Swindle, Ryan; Jefferies,
   Stuart M.; Murphy, Neil
2022FrASS...968452S    Altcode:
  The giant planets of our Solar System are exotic laboratories,
  enshrouding keys which can be used to decipher planetary formation
  mysteries beneath their cloudy veils. Seismology provides a direct
  approach to probe beneath the visible cloud decks, and has long
  been considered a desirable and effective way to reveal the interior
  structure. To peer beneath the striking belts and zones of Jupiter and
  to complement previous measurements—both Doppler and gravimetric—we
  have designed and constructed a novel instrument suite. This set of
  instruments is called PMODE—the Planetary Multilevel Oscillations and
  Dynamics Experiment, and includes a Doppler imager to measure small
  shifts of the Jovian cloud decks; these velocimetric measurements
  contain information related to Jupiter's internal global oscillations
  and atmospheric dynamics. We present a detailed description of
  this instrument suite, along with data reduction techniques and
  preliminary results (as instrumental validation) from a 24-day
  observational campaign using PMODE on the AEOS 3.6 m telescope atop
  Mount Haleakalā, Maui, HI during the summer of 2020, including a
  precise Doppler measurement of the Jovian zonal wind profile. Our
  dataset provides high sensitivity Doppler imaging measurements of
  Jupiter, and our independent detection of the well-studied zonal wind
  profile shows structural similarities to cloud-tracking measurements,
  demonstrating that our dataset may hold the potential to place future
  constraints on amplitudes and possible excitation mechanisms for the
  global modes of Jupiter.

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Title: Post-AO High-resolution Imaging Using the Kraken Multi-frame
    Blind Deconvolution Algorithm
Authors: Hope, Douglas A.; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Li Causi, Gianluca;
   Landoni, Marco; Stangalini, Marco; Pedichini, Fernando; Antoniucci,
   Simone
2022ApJ...926...88H    Altcode: 2022arXiv220202178H
  In the context of extreme adaptive optics for large telescopes,
  we present the Kraken multi-frame blind deconvolution (MFBD)
  algorithm for processing high-cadence acquisitions, capable of
  providing a diffraction-limited estimation of the source brightness
  distribution. This is achieved by a data modeling of each frame in
  the sequence driven by the estimation of the instantaneous wave front
  at the entrance pupil. Under suitable physical constraints, numerical
  convergence is guaranteed by an iteration scheme starting from a compact
  MFBD, which provides a very robust initial guess that only employs a few
  frames. We describe the mathematics behind the process and report the
  high-resolution reconstruction of the spectroscopic binary α And (16.3
  mas separation) acquired with the precursor of SHARK-VIS, the upcoming
  high-contrast camera in the visible for the Large Binocular Telescope.

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Title: A novel approach to identify resonant MHD wave modes in solar
pores and sunspot umbrae: B − ω analysis
Authors: Stangalini, M.; Jess, D. B.; Verth, G.; Fedun, V.; Fleck, B.;
   Jafarzadeh, S.; Keys, P. H.; Murabito, M.; Calchetti, D.; Aldhafeeri,
   A. A.; Berrilli, F.; Del Moro, D.; Jefferies, S. M.; Terradas, J.;
   Soler, R.
2021A&A...649A.169S    Altcode: 2021arXiv210311639S
  The umbral regions of sunspots and pores in the solar photosphere are
  generally dominated by 3 mHz oscillations, which are due to p-modes
  penetrating the magnetic region. In these locations, wave power is
  also significantly reduced with respect to the quiet Sun. However,
  here we study a pore where not only is the power of the oscillations
  in the umbra comparable to, or even larger than, that of the quiet
  Sun, but the main dominant frequency is not 3 mHz as expected, but
  instead 5 mHz. By combining Doppler velocities and spectropolarimetry
  and analysing the relationship between magnetic field strength and
  frequency, the resultant B − ω diagram reveals distinct ridges that
  are remarkably clear signatures of resonant magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD)
  oscillations confined within the pore umbra. We demonstrate that these
  modes, in addition to velocity oscillations, are also accompanied
  by magnetic oscillations, as predicted from MHD theory. The novel
  technique of B − ω analysis proposed in this article opens up
  an exciting new avenue for identifying MHD wave modes in the umbral
  regions of both pores and sunspots.

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Title: Critical Science Plan for the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
    (DKIST)
Authors: Rast, Mark P.; Bello González, Nazaret; Bellot Rubio,
   Luis; Cao, Wenda; Cauzzi, Gianna; Deluca, Edward; de Pontieu, Bart;
   Fletcher, Lyndsay; Gibson, Sarah E.; Judge, Philip G.; Katsukawa,
   Yukio; Kazachenko, Maria D.; Khomenko, Elena; Landi, Enrico; Martínez
   Pillet, Valentín; Petrie, Gordon J. D.; Qiu, Jiong; Rachmeler,
   Laurel A.; Rempel, Matthias; Schmidt, Wolfgang; Scullion, Eamon; Sun,
   Xudong; Welsch, Brian T.; Andretta, Vincenzo; Antolin, Patrick; Ayres,
   Thomas R.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Ballai, Istvan; Berger, Thomas E.;
   Bradshaw, Stephen J.; Campbell, Ryan J.; Carlsson, Mats; Casini,
   Roberto; Centeno, Rebecca; Cranmer, Steven R.; Criscuoli, Serena;
   Deforest, Craig; Deng, Yuanyong; Erdélyi, Robertus; Fedun, Viktor;
   Fischer, Catherine E.; González Manrique, Sergio J.; Hahn, Michael;
   Harra, Louise; Henriques, Vasco M. J.; Hurlburt, Neal E.; Jaeggli,
   Sarah; Jafarzadeh, Shahin; Jain, Rekha; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Keys,
   Peter H.; Kowalski, Adam F.; Kuckein, Christoph; Kuhn, Jeffrey R.;
   Kuridze, David; Liu, Jiajia; Liu, Wei; Longcope, Dana; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis; McAteer, R. T. James; McIntosh, Scott W.; McKenzie, David
   E.; Miralles, Mari Paz; Morton, Richard J.; Muglach, Karin; Nelson,
   Chris J.; Panesar, Navdeep K.; Parenti, Susanna; Parnell, Clare E.;
   Poduval, Bala; Reardon, Kevin P.; Reep, Jeffrey W.; Schad, Thomas A.;
   Schmit, Donald; Sharma, Rahul; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Srivastava,
   Abhishek K.; Sterling, Alphonse C.; Suematsu, Yoshinori; Tarr, Lucas
   A.; Tiwari, Sanjiv; Tritschler, Alexandra; Verth, Gary; Vourlidas,
   Angelos; Wang, Haimin; Wang, Yi-Ming; NSO and DKIST Project; DKIST
   Instrument Scientists; DKIST Science Working Group; DKIST Critical
   Science Plan Community
2021SoPh..296...70R    Altcode: 2020arXiv200808203R
  The National Science Foundation's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
  (DKIST) will revolutionize our ability to measure, understand,
  and model the basic physical processes that control the structure
  and dynamics of the Sun and its atmosphere. The first-light DKIST
  images, released publicly on 29 January 2020, only hint at the
  extraordinary capabilities that will accompany full commissioning of
  the five facility instruments. With this Critical Science Plan (CSP)
  we attempt to anticipate some of what those capabilities will enable,
  providing a snapshot of some of the scientific pursuits that the DKIST
  hopes to engage as start-of-operations nears. The work builds on the
  combined contributions of the DKIST Science Working Group (SWG) and
  CSP Community members, who generously shared their experiences, plans,
  knowledge, and dreams. Discussion is primarily focused on those issues
  to which DKIST will uniquely contribute.

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Title: A new method for detecting solar atmospheric gravity waves
Authors: Calchetti, Daniele; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Fleck, Bernhard;
   Berrilli, Francesco; Shcherbik, Dmitriy V.
2021RSPTA.37900178C    Altcode: 2020arXiv200800210C
  Internal gravity waves have been observed in the Earth's atmosphere
  and oceans, on Mars and Jupiter, and in the Sun's atmosphere. Despite
  ample evidence for the existence of propagating gravity waves in the
  Sun's atmosphere, we still do not have a full understanding of their
  characteristics and overall role for the dynamics and energetics of
  the solar atmosphere. Here, we present a new approach to study the
  propagation of gravity waves in the solar atmosphere. It is based on
  calculating the three-dimensional cross-correlation function between
  the vertical velocities measured at different heights. We apply this
  new method to a time series of co-spatial and co-temporal Doppler
  images obtained by SOHO/MDI and Hinode/SOT as well as to simulations
  of upward propagating gravity wave-packets. We show some preliminary
  results and outline future developments. <P />This article is part of
  the Theo Murphy meeting issue `High-resolution wave dynamics in the
  lower solar atmosphere'.

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Title: Looking into the future of interferometry using free-space
    beam propagation
Authors: Martinez, Arturo O.; Abbott, Caleb G.; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   ten Brummelaar, Theo A.; Baron, Fabien R.
2020SPIE11446E..1BM    Altcode:
  We describe a new concept for future interferometric observations. Our
  laboratory experiment simulates an interferometer with two telescopes
  observing through different volumes of atmospheric turbulence. We
  simulate both vertical and horizontal propagation through the
  atmosphere; the latter mimics free-space beam propagation without
  the need for vacuum pipes or fiber optics. Practically, we simulate
  the effects of atmospheric turbulence using numerically calculated
  Kolmogorov phase screens injected onto a spatial light modulator. We
  correct this distorted wavefront using an adaptive optics system to
  determine the range of turbulence conditions over which we can detect
  fringes from the two telescopes. Our experiment lays the groundwork for
  investigating the potential of having movable telescopes in which light
  propagates from the telescopes to the beam combiner through free space.

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Title: A versatile turbulence simulator for high-resolution imaging
    studies of astronomical targets
Authors: Abbott, Caleb G.; Martinez, Arturo O.; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   ten Brummelaar, Theo; Baron, Fabien R.
2020SPIE11448E..3TA    Altcode:
  We describe versatile turbulence simulator for testing and calibration
  of new techniques for high-resolution imaging of objects outside
  the Earth's atmosphere using ground-based instrumentation. Examples
  here include: dynamic aperture diversity, wave front sensing using
  multi-aperture phase retrieval, and free-space beam propagation for
  rapidly re-configurable interferometers. Used in the testing of all of
  these, the simulator uses a high resolution spatial light modulator in
  tandem with a lower resolution deformable mirror to simulate atmospheric
  phase distortions over a wide range of turbulence conditions.

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Title: Tor Vergata Synoptic Solar Telescope: spectral characterization
    of potassium KI D1 MOFs
Authors: Calchetti, Daniele; Viavattene, Giorgio; Terranegra, Luciano;
   Pietropaolo, Ermanno; Oliviero, Maurizio; Murphy, Neil; Jefferies,
   Stuart M.; Giovannelli, Luca; Del Moro, Dario; Berrilli, Francesco
2020SPIE11445E..2TC    Altcode:
  Synoptic telescopes are fundamental tools in Solar Physics and
  Space Weather. Their typical high cadence full-disk observations are
  pivotal to assess the physical conditions on the Sun and to forecast
  the evolution in time of those conditions. The TSST (Tor vergata
  Synoptic Solar Telescope) is a synoptic telescope composed of two
  main full-disk instruments: an H-alpha Daystar SR-127 telescope and
  a Magneto Optical Filter (MOF)-based telescope in the Potassium KI at
  769.90 nm. The MOF consists in a glass cell containing a Potassium vapor
  where a longitudinal magnetic field is applied. The MOF-based channel
  produces full disk Line-of-Sight magnetic field and velocity maps of
  the solar photosphere at 300 km above the solar surface. In this work,
  we present the optical setup, the spectral characterization of the
  MOF-based telescope, and details on the spectral characterization of the
  MOFs cells which is a required test to obtain calibrated magnetograms
  and dopplergrams.

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Title: Measuring the Dispersion Relation of Acoustic-Gravity Waves
    in the Solar Atmosphere
Authors: Fleck, Bernhard; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Murphy, Neil;
   Berrilli, Francesco
2020ASSP...57..141F    Altcode:
  We use localized measurements of the dispersion relation for
  acoustic-gravity waves to generate the first maps of the spatial
  structure of the sound speed, acoustic cut-off frequency, and radiative
  damping time in the Sun's lower atmosphere. These maps offer a new
  diagnostic for the solar atmosphere.

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Title: Observed Local Dispersion Relations for Magnetoacoustic-gravity
Waves in the Sun’s Atmosphere: Mapping the Acoustic Cutoff Frequency
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Fleck, Bernhard; Murphy, Neil;
   Berrilli, Francesco
2019ApJ...884L...8J    Altcode: 2019arXiv191003198J
  We present the observed local dispersion relations for
  magnetoacoustic-gravity waves in the Sun’s atmosphere for different
  levels of magnetic field strength. We model these data with a
  theoretical local dispersion relation to produce spatial maps of the
  acoustic cutoff frequency in the Sun’s photosphere. These maps have
  implications for the mechanical heating of the Sun’s upper atmosphere,
  by magnetoacoustic-gravity waves, at different phases of the solar
  magnetic activity cycle.

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Title: Recurrence Quantification Analysis as a Post-processing
    Technique in Adaptive Optics High-contrast Imaging
Authors: Stangalini, M.; Li Causi, G.; Pedichini, F.; Antoniucci,
   S.; Mattioli, M.; Christou, J.; Consolini, G.; Hope, D.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Piazzesi, R.; Testa, V.
2018ApJ...868....6S    Altcode: 2018arXiv181000714S
  In this work we explore the possibility of using recurrence
  quantification analysis (RQA) in astronomical high-contrast imaging to
  statistically discriminate the signal of faint objects from speckle
  noise. To this end, we tested RQA on a sequence of high frame rate
  (1 kHz) images acquired with the SHARK-VIS forerunner at the Large
  Binocular Telescope. Our tests show promising results in terms of
  detection contrasts at angular separations as small as 50 mas,
  especially when RQA is applied to a very short sequence of data
  (2 s). These results are discussed in light of possible science
  applications and with respect to other techniques such as, for example,
  angular differential imaging and speckle-free imaging.

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Title: The MOTH II Doppler-Magnetographs and Data Calibration Pipeline
Authors: Forte, Roberta; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Berrilli, Francesco;
   Del Moro, Dario; Fleck, Bernhard; Giovannelli, Luca; Murphy, Neil;
   Pietropaolo, Ermanno; Rodgers, Wayne
2018IAUS..335..335F    Altcode:
  The calibration pipeline of the level zero images obtained from
  the Magneto-Optical filters at Two Heights (MOTH II) instrument is
  presented. MOTH II consists of two 20 cm aperture instruments, each
  using a Magneto-Optical Filter (MOF): one at 5896 Å (Na D2-line), the
  other one at 7700 Å (K I-line). MOTH II instruments thus provide full
  disk line-of-sight Doppler velocity and magnetic field measurements at
  two heights in the solar atmosphere. The developed MOTH II pipeline
  employs a set of standard calibration corrections, a correction for
  signal leakage, due to the non-ideal behavior of the polarizers, and
  the geometrical registration between the eight images acquired by four
  CMOS cameras, relative to two components of the signal in two circular
  polarization states, in each of the two channels. MOTH II data are used
  to investigate atmospheric dynamics (e.g., internal gravity waves and
  magneto-acoustic portals) and Space Weather phenomena. Particularly,
  flare forecasting algorithms, based on the detection of magnetic active
  regions (ARs) and associated flare probability estimation, are currently
  under development. The possible matching of MOTH II data with SDO/HMI
  and SDO/AIA images into a flux rope model, developed in collaboration
  between Harvard-Smithsonian CfA and MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science,
  is being tested.

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Title: Recurrence quantification analysis as a post-processing
    technique in adaptive optics high contrast imaging
Authors: Stangalini, M.; Li Causi, G.; Pedichini, F.; Antoniucci,
   S.; Mattioli, M.; Christou, J.; Consolini, G.; Hope, D.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Piazzesi, R.; Testa, V.
2018SPIE10703E..2VS    Altcode:
  Recurrence Quantification Analysis (RQA) is a non-linear time
  series analysis technique widely employed in many different research
  fields. Among the many applications of this method, it has been shown
  that it can be successfully employed in the detection of small signals
  embedded into noise. In this work we explore the possibility of using
  the RQA in astronomical high contrast imaging, for the detection of
  faint objects nearby bright sources in very high frame rate (1 KHz)
  data series. For this purpose, we used a real 1 kHz image sequence of a
  bright star, acquired with the SHARK-VIS forerunner at LBT. Our results
  show excellent performances in terms of detection contrasts even with a
  very short data sequence (a few seconds). The use of RQA in astronomical
  high contrast imaging is discussed in light of the possible science
  applications and with respect to other techniques like, for example,
  the angular differential imaging (ADI) or the Speckle-Free ADI (SFADI).

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Title: The Importance of Long-Term Synoptic Observations and Data
    Sets for Solar Physics and Helioseismology
Authors: Elsworth, Yvonne; Broomhall, Anne-Marie; Gosain, Sanjay;
   Roth, Markus; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Hill, Frank
2017hdsi.book..143E    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: Image Restoration from Limited Data
Authors: Hope, D.; Hart, M.; Swindle, T. R.; Jefferies, S. M.
2017amos.confE..86H    Altcode:
  Ground-based imagery of satellites is a cornerstone of SSA. The
  resolution of this imagery is fundamentally limited by turbulence in
  the atmosphere. Full resolution can be restored by using advanced
  multi-frame blind deconvolution (MFBD) algorithms which, applied
  to sequences of short-exposure images, estimate the object scene and
  point spread functions (PSFs) that characterize the turbulence. Because
  there are always more variables to estimate than measurements, MFBD is
  an ill-posed problem. Furthermore, in the regime of limited data, for
  example a satellite with a rapidly changing pose, the problem is also
  ill-conditioned because of the lack of diversity in the PSFs. These
  challenges typically lead to poor quality restorations. The Daylight
  Object Restoration Algorithm (DORA) overcomes this problem, by using
  additional simultaneous measurements from a wave-front sensor, along
  with a frozen flow model of the atmosphere, to achieve high-resolution
  estimates of space objects from limited data sets. The improvement in
  image resolution achieved by DORA when compared to current state of
  the art MFBD algorithms is demonstrated using real data.

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Title: Daylight operation of a sodium laser guide star for adaptive
    optics wavefront sensing
Authors: Hart, Michael; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Murphy, Neil
2016JATIS...2d0501H    Altcode:
  We report contrast measurements of a sodium resonance guide star against
  the daylight sky when observed through a tuned magneto-optical filter
  (MOF). The guide star was created by projection of a laser beam at
  589.16 nm into the mesospheric sodium layer and the observations
  were made with a collocated 1.5-m telescope. While MOFs are used with
  sodium light detecting and ranging systems during the day to improve
  the signal-to-noise ratio of the measurements, they have not so far
  been employed with laser guide stars to drive adaptive optics (AO)
  systems to correct atmospherically induced image blur. We interpret
  our results in terms of the performance of AO systems for astronomy,
  with particular emphasis on thermal infrared observations at the next
  generation of extremely large telescopes now being built.

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Title: The Importance of Long-Term Synoptic Observations and Data
    Sets for Solar Physics and Helioseismology
Authors: Elsworth, Yvonne; Broomhall, Anne-Marie; Gosain, Sanjay;
   Roth, Markus; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Hill, Frank
2015SSRv..196..137E    Altcode: 2015SSRv..tmp..106E
  A casual single glance at the Sun would not lead an observer to conclude
  that it varies. The discovery of the 11-year sunspot cycle was only
  made possible through systematic daily observations of the Sun over
  150 years and even today historic sunspot drawings are used to study
  the behavior of past solar cycles. The origin of solar activity is
  still poorly understood as shown by the number of different models
  that give widely different predictions for the strength and timing
  of future cycles. Our understanding of the rapid transient phenomena
  related to solar activity, such as flares and coronal mass ejections
  (CMEs) is also insufficient and making reliable predictions of these
  events, which can adversely impact technology, remains elusive. There
  is thus still much to learn about the Sun and its activity that requires
  observations over many solar cycles. In particular, modern helioseismic
  observations of the solar interior currently span only 1.5 cycles,
  which is far too short to adequately sample the characteristics of
  the plasma flows that govern the dynamo mechanism underlying solar
  activity. In this paper, we review some of the long-term solar and
  helioseismic observations and outline some future directions.

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Title: ADAHELI: exploring the fast, dynamic Sun in the x-ray, optical,
    and near-infrared
Authors: Berrilli, Francesco; Soffitta, Paolo; Velli, Marco; Sabatini,
   Paolo; Bigazzi, Alberto; Bellazzini, Ronaldo; Bellot Rubio, Luis
   Ramon; Brez, Alessandro; Carbone, Vincenzo; Cauzzi, Gianna; Cavallini,
   Fabio; Consolini, Giuseppe; Curti, Fabio; Del Moro, Dario; Di Giorgio,
   Anna Maria; Ermolli, Ilaria; Fabiani, Sergio; Faurobert, Marianne;
   Feller, Alex; Galsgaard, Klaus; Gburek, Szymon; Giannattasio, Fabio;
   Giovannelli, Luca; Hirzberger, Johann; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Madjarska,
   Maria S.; Manni, Fabio; Mazzoni, Alessandro; Muleri, Fabio; Penza,
   Valentina; Peres, Giovanni; Piazzesi, Roberto; Pieralli, Francesca;
   Pietropaolo, Ermanno; Martinez Pillet, Valentin; Pinchera, Michele;
   Reale, Fabio; Romano, Paolo; Romoli, Andrea; Romoli, Marco; Rubini,
   Alda; Rudawy, Pawel; Sandri, Paolo; Scardigli, Stefano; Spandre,
   Gloria; Solanki, Sami K.; Stangalini, Marco; Vecchio, Antonio;
   Zuccarello, Francesca
2015JATIS...1d4006B    Altcode:
  Advanced Astronomy for Heliophysics Plus (ADAHELI) is a project concept
  for a small solar and space weather mission with a budget compatible
  with an European Space Agency (ESA) S-class mission, including launch,
  and a fast development cycle. ADAHELI was submitted to the European
  Space Agency by a European-wide consortium of solar physics research
  institutes in response to the "Call for a small mission opportunity
  for a launch in 2017," of March 9, 2012. The ADAHELI project builds
  on the heritage of the former ADAHELI mission, which had successfully
  completed its phase-A study under the Italian Space Agency 2007 Small
  Mission Programme, thus proving the soundness and feasibility of
  its innovative low-budget design. ADAHELI is a solar space mission
  with two main instruments: ISODY: an imager, based on Fabry-Pérot
  interferometers, whose design is optimized to the acquisition of
  highest cadence, long-duration, multiline spectropolarimetric images
  in the visible/near-infrared region of the solar spectrum. XSPO: an
  x-ray polarimeter for solar flares in x-rays with energies in the 15
  to 35 keV range. ADAHELI is capable of performing observations that
  cannot be addressed by other currently planned solar space missions,
  due to their limited telemetry, or by ground-based facilities, due to
  the problematic effect of the terrestrial atmosphere.

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Title: Modeling Solar Oscillation Power Spectra. II. Parametric
    Model of Spectral Lines Observed in Doppler-velocity Measurements
Authors: Vorontsov, Sergei V.; Jefferies, Stuart M.
2013ApJ...778...75V    Altcode: 2013arXiv1310.7924V
  We describe a global parametric model for the observed power spectra
  of solar oscillations of intermediate and low degree. A physically
  motivated parameterization is used as a substitute for a direct
  description of mode excitation and damping as these mechanisms remain
  poorly understood. The model is targeted at the accurate fitting of
  power spectra coming from Doppler-velocity measurements and uses an
  adaptive response function that accounts for both the vertical and
  horizontal components of the velocity field on the solar surface
  and for possible instrumental and observational distortions. The
  model is continuous in frequency, can easily be adapted to intensity
  measurements, and extends naturally to the analysis of high-frequency
  pseudomodes (interference peaks at frequencies above the atmospheric
  acoustic cutoff).

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Title: Observations of the Interaction of Acoustic Waves and
    Small-scale Magnetic Fields in a Quiet Sun
Authors: Chitta, Lakshmi Pradeep; Jain, Rekha; Kariyappa, R.;
   Jefferies, Stuart M.
2012ApJ...744...98C    Altcode: 2012ApJ...744...98P
  The effect of the magnetic field on photospheric intensity and
  velocity oscillations at the sites of small-scale magnetic fields
  (SMFs) in a quiet Sun near the solar disk center is studied. We use
  observations made by the G-band filter in the Solar Optical Telescope
  on board Hinode for intensity oscillations; Doppler velocity, magnetic
  field, and continuum intensity are derived from an Ni I photospheric
  absorption line at 6767.8 Å using the Michelson Doppler Imager on
  board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. Our analysis shows that
  both the high-resolution intensity observed in the G band and velocity
  oscillations are influenced by the presence of a magnetic field. While
  intensity oscillations are suppressed at all frequencies in strong
  magnetic field regions compared to weak magnetic field regions,
  velocity oscillations show an enhancement of power in the frequency
  band 5.5-7 mHz. We find that there is a drop of 20%-30% in the p-mode
  power of velocity oscillations within the SMFs when compared to the
  regions surrounding them. Our findings indicate that the nature of the
  interaction of acoustic waves with the quiet Sun SMFs is similar to
  that of large-scale magnetic fields in active regions. We also report
  the first results of the center-to-limb variation of such effects
  using the observations of the quiet Sun from the Helioseismic and
  Magnetic Imager (HMI) aboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). The
  independent verification of these interactions using SDO/HMI suggests
  that the velocity power drop of 20%-30% in p-modes is fairly constant
  across the solar disk.

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Title: The intensity effect in magneto-optical filters
Authors: Oliviero, M.; Severino, G.; Berrilli, F.; Moretti, P. F.;
   Jefferies, S. M.
2011SPIE.8148E..0VO    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..27O
  We used a laser system for determining the bandpasses of the two
  vapour cells, the Magneto-Optical Filter (MOF) and the Wing Selector
  (WS), which are the core of solar narrow-band filters based on the
  MOF technology. A new result, which we called the Intensity Effect,
  was found: the MOF and WS bandpasses depend not only on the temperature
  at which the cell is heated and the external magnetic field in which
  the cell is embedded, but also on the radiation intensity entering
  the cell. A theoretical interpretation of the Intensity Effect is
  proposed in terms of the kinetic equilibrium of the potassium atomic
  populations inside the vapour cell. We need to take the Intensity
  Effect into account for setting-up MOF based instruments for solar and
  stellar observations as well as for modelling the MOF and WS spectral
  transmissions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: DIMMI-2h a MOF-based instrument for Solar Satellite ADAHELI
Authors: Stangalini, M.; Moretti, P. F.; Berrilli, F.; Del Moro, D.;
   Jefferies, S. M.; Severino, G.; Oliviero, M.
2011SPIE.8148E..0US    Altcode: 2011SPIE.8148E..26S
  The Doppler-Intensity-Magnetograms with a Magneto-optical filter
  Instrument at two heights (DIMMI-2h) is a double channel imager using
  Magneto Optical Filters (MOF) in the potassium 770 nm and sodium
  589 nm lines. The instrument will provide simultaneous dopplergrams
  (velocity fields), continuum intensity and longitudinal magnetic flux
  images at two heights in the solar atmosphere corresponding to low
  and high photosphere. Dimmi- 2h is the possible piggy-back payload on
  ADAHELI satellite. The spatial resolution (approximately 4 arcsec) and
  the high temporal cadence (15 s) will permit to investigate low and
  medium oscillating modes (from 0 to below 1000) up to approximately
  32 mHz in the frequency spectrum. The acquisition of long-term
  simultaneous velocity, intensity and magnetic information up to these
  high frequencies will permit also the study of the propagation and
  excitation of the waves with a frequency resolution never obtained
  before.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD wave transmission in the Sun's atmosphere
Authors: Stangalini, M.; Del Moro, D.; Berrilli, F.; Jefferies, S. M.
2011A&A...534A..65S    Altcode: 2011arXiv1108.4576S
  Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) wave propagation inside the Sun's atmosphere
  is closely related to the magnetic field topology. For example, magnetic
  fields are able to lower the cutoff frequency for acoustic waves,
  thus allowing the propagation of waves that would otherwise be trapped
  below the photosphere into the upper atmosphere. In addition, MHD
  waves can be either transmitted or converted into other forms of waves
  at altitudes where the sound speed equals the Alfvén speed. We take
  advantage of the large field-of-view provided by the IBIS experiment
  to study the wave propagation at two heights in the solar atmosphere,
  which is probed using the photospheric Fe 617.3 nm spectral line and
  the chromospheric Ca 854.2 nm spectral line, and its relationship to
  the local magnetic field. Among other things, we find substantial
  leakage of waves with five-minute periods in the chromosphere at
  the edges of a pore and in the diffuse magnetic field surrounding
  it. By using spectropolarimetric inversions of Hinode SOT/SP data,
  we also find a relationship between the photospheric power spectrum
  and the magnetic field inclination angle. In particular, we identify
  well-defined transmission peaks around 25° for five-minute waves and
  around 15° for three-minute waves. We propose a very simple model
  based on wave transmission theory to explain this behavior. Finally,
  our analysis of both the power spectra and chromospheric amplification
  spectra suggests the presence of longitudinal acoustic waves along
  the magnetic field lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deconvolution of astronomical images using SOR with adaptive
    relaxation
Authors: Vorontsov, S. V.; Strakhov, V. N.; Jefferies, S. M.; Borelli,
   K. J.
2011OExpr..1913509V    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Oscillations And Acoustic Power Measured In H-alpha
Authors: Jackiewicz, Jason; Balasubramaniam, K.; McAteer, R.;
   Jefferies, S. M.
2011SPD....42.1731J    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.1731J
  We present initial studies of the evidence of acoustic power in H alpha
  data observed with the ISOON telescope. Uninterrupted times series
  were obtained at 1-minute cadence of the H alpha intensity and Doppler
  velocity signals of both quiet and active regions on the Sun. Spatial
  and temporal power maps show enhanced contributions from a flaring
  active region that is a strong function of frequency. Cross-correlations
  and wave travel times are computed and give indications of the presence
  of running waves below the acoustic cut-off frequency.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Future instrumentation for solar physics: a double channel
    MOF imager on board ASI Space Mission ADAHELI
Authors: Moretti, P. F.; Berrilli, F.; Bigazzi, A.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Murphy, N.; Roselli, L.; di Mauro, M. P.
2010Ap&SS.328..313M    Altcode: 2010Ap&SS.tmp...12M
  A Magneto-Optical Filter-based system has been proposed as an optional
  payload for ASI’s low-budget Solar Mission ADAHELI, which has
  completed its Phase A feasibility study. The instrument is capable
  of providing simultaneous Dopplergrams, intensity and magnetic solar
  full-disk maps using the potassium 770 nm and sodium 589 nm solar
  Fraunhofer lines. The instrument is a version, re-designed for a
  space environment, of the one which has run an observing campaign at
  the South Pole in 2008 with unprecedented performance. The MOF-based
  system we present here is a low-cost, low-weight instrument, thus
  particularly fit to space applications, capable of providing stability
  and sensitivity of signals on long-term observations. The instrument
  will explore regions of the oscillation spectrum not available to
  other missions’ instruments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Origin of High-Frequency "Acoustic” Power in
    Photospheric and Chromospheric Velocity Power Spectra
Authors: Fleck, Bernard; Straus, T.; Carlsson, M.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Severino, G.; Tarbell, T. D.
2010AAS...21640309F    Altcode: 2010BAAS...41..879F
  In a recent paper (Fleck et al., 2010) we compared observed Dopplergram
  time series from Hinode with results from 3-D numerical simulations
  based on the Oslo "Stagger” and CO5BOLD codes. Given the rapid falloff
  of atmospheric modulation transfer functions at high frequencies due
  to the extended widths of typical velocity response functions, one
  would expect the high-frequency tail of Doppler power spectra to drop
  significantly below those of actual velocities at the corresponding
  heights in the simulations. Surprisingly, our analysis of power spectra
  of Doppler shifts of simulated line profiles did not reveal such a
  steep falloff at high frequencies. Instead, they are comparable to
  (and in some cases even larger than) those of the actual velocities,
  making estimates of the energy flux of high frequency acoustic
  waves questionable, in particular those that apply atmospheric MTF
  corrections. In this work we study the cause of this unexpected
  behavior in detail, with particular emphasis on the role of rapidly
  changing velocity response functions in a dynamic atmosphere with
  strong vertical velocity gradients.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High frequency waves in the solar atmosphere?.
Authors: Fleck, B.; Straus, T.; Carlsson, M.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Severino, G.; Tarbell, T. D.
2010MmSAI..81..777F    Altcode: 2010arXiv1002.3285F
  The present study addresses the following questions: How representative
  of the actual velocities in the solar atmosphere are the Doppler
  shifts of spectral lines? How reliable is the velocity signal derived
  from narrowband filtergrams? How well defined is the height of the
  measured Doppler signal? Why do phase difference spectra always pull
  to 0<SUP>o</SUP> phase lag at high frequencies? Can we actually observe
  high frequency waves (P&lt; 70 s)? What is the atmospheric MTF of high
  frequency waves? How reliably can we determine the energy flux of high
  frequency waves? We address these questions by comparing observations
  obtained with Hinode/NFI with results from two 3D numerical simulations
  (Oslo Stagger and CO<SUP>5</SUP>BOLD). Our results suggest that the
  observed high frequency Doppler velocity signal is caused by rapid
  height variations of the velocity response function in an atmosphere
  with strong velocity gradients and cannot be interpreted as evidence of
  propagating high frequency acoustic waves. Estimates of the energy flux
  of high frequency waves should be treated with caution, in particular
  those that apply atmospheric MTF corrections.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the detection of fast moving upflows in the quiet solar
    photosphere.
Authors: Straus, Th.; Fleck, B.; Jefferies, S. M.; Carlsson, M.;
   Tarbell, T. D.
2010MmSAI..81..751S    Altcode: 2010arXiv1002.3305S
  In our studies of the dynamics and energetics of the solar atmosphere,
  we have detected, in high-quality observations from Hinode SOT/NFI,
  ubiquitous small-scale upflows which move horizontally with supersonic
  velocities in the quiet Sun. We present the properties of these fast
  moving upflows (FMUs) and discuss different interpretations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Toward Eliminating Systematic Errors in Intermediate-Degree
    p-Mode Measurements
Authors: Vorontsov, S. V.; Jefferies, S. M.; Giebink, C.; Schou, J.
2009ASPC..416..301V    Altcode:
  We report new measurements of p-mode frequency splittings from Michelson
  Doppler Imager (MDI) in which systematic errors, previously seen,
  appear to have been eliminated. We identify neglect of the effects
  of mode coupling by differential rotation as a major source of the
  systematic errors.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Role of Acoustic-Gravity Waves in the Energetics of
    the Solar Atmosphere
Authors: Straus, T.; Fleck, B.; Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.;
   Severino, G.; Steffen, M.; Tarbell, T. D.
2009ASPC..415...95S    Altcode: 2010arXiv1003.3773S
  In a recent paper (Straus et al. 2008) we determined the energy
  flux of internal gravity waves in the lower solar atmosphere using
  a combination of 3D numerical simulations and observations obtained
  with the IBIS instrument operated at the Dunn Solar Telescope and
  the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) on SOHO. In this paper we extend
  these studies using coordinated observations from SOT/NFI and SOT/SP
  on Hinode and MDI. The new measurements confirm that gravity waves
  are the dominant phenomenon in the quiet middle/upper photosphere and
  that they transport more mechanical energy than the high-frequency
  (&gt; 5 mHz) acoustic waves, even though we find an acoustic flux 3-5
  times larger than the upper limit estimate of Fossum &amp; Carlsson
  (2006). It therefore appears justified to reconsider the significance of
  (non-M)HD waves for the energy balance of the solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On The Interpretation Of Hinode NFI Filtergrams
Authors: Fleck, Bernard; Straus, T.; Jefferies, S. M.; Severino, G.;
   Tarbell, T. D.
2009SPD....40.0927F    Altcode:
  Phase difference spectra between the velocity signals at two
  different heights represent a powerful tool to study the propagation
  characteristics of acoustic-gravity waves in the solar atmosphere. In
  our efforts to study the dynamics and energetics of these waves we
  have acquired high-resolution, high-cadence time series with Hinode
  SOT/NFI at two different levels in the Mg b2 or Na D1 lines. The
  observed phase spectra between the velocity signals derived from the
  "wing" and "core" filtergrams of these lines do not show the expected
  behavior. This points to (a) a fundamental lack of understanding of
  the propagation characteristics of acoustic waves, which may be more
  complex than commonly assumed, or (b) significant difficulties in
  interpreting filtergrams taken at fixed wavelengths in the wings of an
  absorption line, possibly limiting the diagnostic potential of Doppler
  "velocity" measurements from such filtergrams. The present work aims
  at disentangling these effects with the help of numerical simulations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Frequency Acoustic Waves in the Sun's Atmosphere
Authors: Fleck, B.; Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Severino, G.;
   Straus, T.; Tarbell, T. D.
2008ESPM...12.2.39F    Altcode:
  This year marks the 60th anniversary of two pioneering papers by
  Schwarzschild (1948) and Biermann (1948), who independently proposed
  that acoustic waves generated in the turbulent convection zone play
  an important role in the heating of the chromosphere and corona. High
  frequency acoustic waves have remained one of the leading contenders
  for solving the heating problem of the non-magnetic chromospheres of
  the Sun and late-type stars ever since. Earlier attempts to determine
  the acoustic energy flux from ground were compromised by atmospheric
  seeing, which has its biggest effect on the high frequency parts
  of the observed signal. Recently, based on a comparison of TRACE
  observations and 1-D simulations, Fossum &amp; Carlsson (2005, 2006)
  concluded that high-frequency acoustic waves are not sufficient
  to heat the solar chromosphere. The same conclusion was reached by
  Carlsson et al. (2007) from an analysis of Hinode SOT/BFI Ca II H and
  blue continuum observations. Other authors (e.g. Cuntz et al. 2007;
  Wedemeyer-Boehm et al. 2007, Kalkofen 2007), however, questioned
  these results for a number of reasons. Because of its limited spatial
  resolution and limited sensitivity there are inherent difficulties
  when comparing TRACE observations with numerical simulations. Further,
  intensity oscillations are difficult to interpret, as they result from
  a phase-sensitive mix of temperature and pressure fluctuations, and
  non-local radiation transfer effects may complicate the picture even
  more. Here we revisit the role of high frequency acoustic waves in the
  dynamics and energetics of the Sun's atmosphere using high cadence,
  high resolution Doppler velocity measurements obtained with SOT/SP
  and SOT/NFI on Hinode.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Role of Acoustic-gravity Waves in the Energetics of
    the Solar Atmosphere
Authors: Straus, T.; Fleck, B.; Jefferies, S. M.; Cauzzi, G.; McIntosh,
   S. W.; Reardon, K.; Severino, G.; Steffen, M.; Suter, M.; Tarbell,
   T. D.
2008ESPM...12.2.11S    Altcode:
  We revisit the dynamics and energetics of the solar atmosphere, using a
  combination of high-quality observations and 3D numerical simulations
  of the overshoot region of compressible convection into the stable
  photosphere. We discuss the contribution of acoustic-gravity waves
  to the energy balance of the photosphere and low chromosphere. We
  demonstrate the presence of propagating internal gravity waves at
  low frequencies (&lt; 5mHz). Surprisingly, these waves are found
  to be the dominant phenomenon in the quiet middle/upper photosphere
  and to transport a significant amount of mechanical energy into the
  atmosphere outweighing the contribution of high-frequency (&gt; 5mHz)
  acoustic waves by more than an order of magnitude. We compare the
  properties of high-frequency waves in the simulations with results
  of recent high cadence, high resolution Doppler velocity measurements
  obtained with SOT/SP and SOT/NFI on Hinode. Our results seem to be in
  conflict with the simple picture of upward propagating sound waves. We
  discuss the implications of our findings on the energy flux estimate
  at high-frequencies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Energy Flux of Internal Gravity Waves in the Lower Solar
    Atmosphere
Authors: Straus, Thomas; Fleck, Bernhard; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   Cauzzi, Gianna; McIntosh, Scott W.; Reardon, Kevin; Severino, Giuseppe;
   Steffen, Matthias
2008ApJ...681L.125S    Altcode:
  Stably stratified fluids, such as stellar and planetary atmospheres,
  can support and propagate gravity waves. On Earth these waves,
  which can transport energy and momentum over large distances and can
  trigger convection, contribute to the formation of our weather and
  global climate. Gravity waves also play a pivotal role in planetary
  sciences and modern stellar physics. They have also been proposed
  as an agent for the heating of stellar atmospheres and coronae, the
  exact mechanism behind which is one of the outstanding puzzles in solar
  and stellar physics. Using a combination of high-quality observations
  and 3D numerical simulations we have the first unambiguous detection
  of propagating gravity waves in the Sun's (and hence a stellar)
  atmosphere. Moreover, we are able to determine the height dependence of
  their energy flux and find that at the base of the Sun's chromosphere it
  is around 5 kW m<SUP>-2</SUP>. This amount of energy is comparable to
  the radiative losses of the entire chromosphere and points to internal
  gravity waves as a key mediator of energy into the solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Frequency Acoustic Waves in the Sun's Atmosphere
Authors: Fleck, B.; Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Straus, T.;
   Tarbell, T. D.
2008AGUSMSP41B..04F    Altcode:
  This year marks the 60th anniversary of two pioneering papers by
  Schwarzschild (1948) and Biermann (1948), who independently proposed
  that acoustic waves generated in the turbulent convection zone play
  an important role in the heating of the chromosphere and corona. High
  frequency acoustic waves have remained one of the leading contenders
  for solving the heating problem of the non-magnetic chromospheres of
  the Sun and late-type stars ever since. Earlier attempts to determine
  the acoustic energy flux from ground were compromised by atmospheric
  seeing, which has its biggest effect on the high frequency parts
  of the observed signal. Recently, based on a comparison of TRACE
  observations and 1-D simulations, Fossum &amp; Carlsson (2005, 2006)
  concluded that high-frequency acoustic waves are not sufficient to heat
  the solar chromosphere. The same conclusion was reached by Carlsson et
  al. (2007) from an analysis of Hinode SOT/BFI Ca II H and blue continuum
  observations. Other authors (e.g. Cuntz et al. 2007; Wedemeyer-Boehm
  et al. 2007, Kalkofen 2007), however, questioned these results for
  a number of reasons. Because of its limited spatial resolution and
  limited sensitivity there are inherent difficulties when comparing TRACE
  observations with numerical simulations. Further, intensity oscillations
  are difficult to interpret, as they result from a phase-sensitive mix of
  density, temperature, and pressure fluctuations, and radiation transfer
  effects may complicate the picture even more. Here we revisit the role
  of high frequency acoustic waves in the Sun's atmosphere using high
  cadence, high resolution Doppler velocity measurements obtained with
  SOT/SP and SOT/NFI on Hinode.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-Spectral Analysis of Acoustic Mode Characteristics in
    Active Regions
Authors: Jain, K.; Hill, F.; Tripathy, S. C.; González-Hernández,
   I.; Armstrong, J. D.; Jefferies, S. M.; Rhodes, E. J., Jr.; Rose, P.
2008ASPC..383..389J    Altcode:
  We study the relative differences in acoustic mode parameters
  in regions of high magnetic fields at different heights in the
  solar atmosphere. The data sets include simultaneous Dopplergrams
  obtained with the Ni I 676.8~nm from Global Oscillation Network Group
  (GONG+) and K I 769.9 nm from Magneto-Optical Filters at Two Heights
  (MOTH). The technique used here is the ring-diagram analysis, which has
  been proven to be a powerful tool to study the localized regions on the
  solar surface. We find that there is a difference in power suppression
  and relative changes in frequencies in active regions with increasing
  height. This is explained in terms of the expanding magnetic flux tubes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-resolution imaging through strong turbulence
Authors: Hope, Douglas A.; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Giebienk, Cindy
2007SPIE.6697E..0CH    Altcode: 2007SPIE.6697E..12H
  Random fluctuations in the index of refraction, caused by differential
  heating and cooling of the atmosphere, can severely limit the quality of
  ground-based observations of space objects. Techniques such as adaptive
  optics can help compensate for the deleterious effects that turbulence
  has on the images by deforming the telescope mirror and thus correcting
  the wave-front. However, when imaging through strong turbulence such
  techniques may not adequately correct the wave-front. In such cases
  blind restoration techniques - which estimate both the atmospheric
  turbulence characterized by the atmospheric point-spread-function and
  the object that is being observed - must be used. We demonstrate high
  quality blind restorations of object scenes, obtained when observing
  through strong turbulence, by using a sequence of images obtained
  simultaneously at different wavelengths and prior information on
  the distribution of the sources of regions of low spectral power in
  the data.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observational signatures of the interaction between acoustic
    waves and the solar magnetic canopy
Authors: Moretti, P. F.; Jefferies, S. M.; Armstrong, J. D.; McIntosh,
   S. W.
2007A&A...471..961M    Altcode:
  Aims:We show that the spatial distribution (and its variation
  with frequency) of the power spectra of the velocity and intensity
  signals, in and around solar active regions, is a manifestation of the
  interaction of acoustic waves at the magnetic canopy. <BR />Methods:
  We analysed 6 h of simultaneous, full-disk, velocity and intensity
  images obtained using the MOTH instrument tuned in the Na D2 line at
  589 nm and K D1 line at 770 nm, and full-disk velocity images from
  the SOHO/MDI experiment using the Ni line at 677 nm. <BR />Results:
  We propose that more than one type of magneto-acoustic-gravity wave
  is required to explain the well-known phenomena of p-mode absorption
  and power halos.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Suppression Of Acoustic Power In Solar Active Regions: An
    Analysis At Different Heights
Authors: Tripathy, Sushanta; Jain, K.; Hill, F.; Gonzalez-Hernandez,
   I.; Armstrong, J. D.; Jefferies, S. M.; Rhodes, E. J., Jr.; Rose, P. J.
2007AAS...210.2411T    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..130T
  The presence of enhanced magnetic fields in active regions is known to
  suppress acoustic power and modify oscillation frequencies. Applying
  the ring diagram technique to data from three different spectral lines
  at different heights in the solar atmosphere, we analyze the variation
  of the acoustic power with height. The data sets include simultaneous
  Dopplergrams obtained with the Ni I 676.8 nm from Global Oscillation
  Network Group (GONG), K I 769.9 nm from Magneto-Optical Filters at Two
  Heights (MOTH) and Na I 589.0 nm from MOTH and Mount Wilson Observatory
  (MWO). It should be noted that the Ni and K lines are formed in the
  photosphere while Na line is formed in lower chromosphere. Preliminary
  results suggest a difference in power suppression with increasing
  height, which can be explained in terms of the expanding magnetic
  flux tubes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the observation of traveling acoustic waves in the solar
    atmosphere using a magneto-optical filter
Authors: Haberreiter, M.; Finsterle, W.; Jefferies, S. M.
2007AN....328..211H    Altcode:
  In contrast to low-frequency waves that are trapped in the cavity of the
  Sun, high-frequency waves can travel freely in the solar atmosphere. By
  modelling the observed intensity signal in the red and blue wings of K I
  7699 Å and Na I 5890 Å, we aim to better understand the measurements
  carried out with the Magneto-Optical Filter at Two Heights (MOTH)
  experiment. We model the observed intensity signal with radiative
  transfer calculations carried out with the COde for Solar Irradiance
  (COSI). Furthermore, we derive the formation height of the lines
  in order to analyze to what extent the contribution functions are
  modulated by the acoustic waves. We find a phase lag between the red
  and blue filter for acoustic waves with a frequency above ≈7 mHz
  and conclude that a frequency dependent data analysis is required for
  higher frequencies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A comparison of acoustic mode parameters using multi-spectral
    data
Authors: Jain, K.; Hill, F.; Tripathy, S. C.; Antia, H. M.; Armstrong,
   J. D.; Jefferies, S. M.; Rhodes, E. J., Jr.; Rose, P. J.
2006ESASP.624E.103J    Altcode: 2006soho...18E.103J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Toward improving the seismic visibility of the solar tachocline
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Vorontsov, S. V.; Giebink, C.
2006ESASP.624E...7J    Altcode: 2006soho...18E...7J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Does the inference of solar subsurface flow change with choice
    of the spectral line?
Authors: Jain, K.; Hill, F.; González Hernández, I.; Toner, C. G.;
   Tripathy, S. C.; Armstrong, J. D.; Jefferies, S. M.
2006ESASP.624E.127J    Altcode: 2006soho...18E.127J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Low-frequency magneto-acoustic waves in the solar chromosphere
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Armstrong, J. D.; Bogdan,
   T. J.; Cacciani, A.; Fleck, B.
2006ESASP.624E..16J    Altcode: 2006soho...18E..16J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetoacoustic Portals and the Basal Heating of the Solar
    Chromosphere
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; McIntosh, Scott W.; Armstrong, James
   D.; Bogdan, Thomas J.; Cacciani, Alessandro; Fleck, Bernhard
2006ApJ...648L.151J    Altcode:
  We show that inclined magnetic field lines at the boundaries of
  large-scale convective cells (supergranules) provide “portals”
  through which low-frequency (&lt;5 mHz) magnetoacoustic waves can
  propagate into the solar chromosphere. The energy flux carried by
  these waves at a height of 400 km above the solar surface is found
  to be a factor of 4 greater than that carried by the high-frequency
  (&gt;5 mHz) acoustic waves, which are believed to provide the dominant
  source of wave heating of the chromosphere. This result opens up
  the possibility that low-frequency magnetoacoustic waves provide a
  significant source of energy for balancing the radiative losses of
  the ambient solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observing the Modification of the Acoustic Cutoff Frequency
    by Field Inclination Angle
Authors: McIntosh, Scott W.; Jefferies, Stuart M.
2006ApJ...647L..77M    Altcode:
  We use observations of a sunspot from the Transition Region and
  Coronal Explorer (TRACE) spacecraft to demonstrate observationally
  the modification of the acoustic cutoff frequency in the lower solar
  chromosphere by the changing the inclination of the magnetic field as
  first predicted theoretically by Bel &amp; Leroy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Low-frequency magneto-acoustic waves in the solar chromosphere
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Armstrong, J. D.; Cacciani,
   A.; Bogdan, T. J.; Fleck, B.
2006IAUJD...3E..62J    Altcode:
  We demonstrate that low-frequency (&lt; 5 mHz) propagating
  magneto-acoustic waves provide a larger source of energy for balancing
  the radiative losses of the solar chromosphere than their high-frequency
  (&gt; 5 mHz) counterparts. The low-frequency waves, which are normally
  evanescent in the solar atmosphere, are able to propagate through
  "acoustic portals" that exist in areas of strong, significantly
  inclined (&gt; 30° with respect to the vertical), magnetic field. Such
  conditions are found both in active regions and at the boundaries of
  supergranules. The latter implies that acoustic portals are omnipresent
  over the solar surface and throughout the magnetic activity cycle,
  an essential prerequisite for any baseline heating mechanism.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Low-frequency Magneto-acoustic Waves In The Solar Chromosphere
Authors: Fleck, Bernard; Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Armstrong,
   J. D.; Cacciani, A.; Bogdan, T. J.
2006SPD....37.0206F    Altcode: 2006BAAS...38..662F
  We demonstrate that low-frequency (&lt; 5 mHz) propagating
  magneto-acoustic waves provide a larger source of energy for balancing
  the radiative losses of the solar chromosphere than their high-frequency
  (&gt; 5 mHz) counterparts. The low-frequency waves, which are normally
  evanescent in the solar atmosphere, are able to propagate through
  "acoustic portals” that exist in areas of strong, significantly
  inclined (&gt; 30° with respect to the vertical), magnetic field. Such
  conditions are found both in active regions and at the boundaries of
  supergranules. The latter implies that acoustic portals are omnipresent
  over the solar surface and throughout the magnetic activity cycle,
  an essential prerequisite for any baseline heating mechanism.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Calcium-Based Magneto-Optical Filter
Authors: Rodgers, W.; Murphy, N.; Jefferies, S. M.
2005AGUSMSH13C..13R    Altcode:
  The magneto-optical filter, MOF [1], has been used for imaged Doppler
  and magnetic field observations of the Sun for nearly three decades. The
  strengths of the MOF lie in its wavelength stability, its narrow
  pass-band (approx. 0.005nm) and high throughput. Until recently, its
  main limitation has been that it has only been available for use with
  the Na I (sodium) and K I (potassium) D-lines. We will discuss some
  developments in the technology for building the vapor cells for the
  MOF and will show preliminary results for a calcium-based MOF. The Ca I
  line at 422nm is formed in the mid-chromosphere and can thus provide a
  probe for velocity and magnetic field information for this region. [1]
  Cacciani and Fofi, Solar Phys. 59, 1978

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Acoustic Mapping of the Magnetic Canopy in the Solar
    Chromosphere
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Armstrong, J. D.; Cacciani, A.; Finsterle,
   W.; McIntosh, S. W.
2005AGUSMSH13C..11J    Altcode:
  We show that high-frequency acoustic waves can be used to map the
  location where the gas and magnetic pressures of the plasma in the
  solar chromosphere are comparable. This transition region, which can be
  considered as a "magnetic canopy" where MHD waves can transform from one
  type into another, is believe to play a key role in the flow of mass
  and energy through the chromosphere. Results will be presented from
  the analysis of 18 (uninterrupted) hours of simultaneous, full-disk,
  velocity observations using the Ni (676 nm), K (770 nm) and Na (589 nm)
  Fraunhofer lines (with the SOHO/MDI and MOTH/South Pole instruments),
  and 106 (uninterrupted) hours of K and Na data (from the MOTH/South
  Pole instrument). The MOTH data were acquired every 10 seconds and the
  MDI data every 60 seconds. This work was funded by awards OPP-0087541
  and OPP-0338251 from the National Science Foundation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A new Instrument for High-cadence, Multi-height Observations
    of the Velocity and Magnetic Fields of the Full Solar Disk
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Armstrong, J. D.; Cacciani, A.; Giebink,
   C. A.; Rodgers, W.; Murphy, N.
2005AGUSMSH13C..12J    Altcode:
  We will describe a new instrument that is being built to measure the
  velocity, intensity and line-of-sight magnetic fields of the full solar
  disk, simultaneously at four heights in the solar atmosphere with a
  resolution of 4 arc-seconds and a cadence of 10 seconds. The heart of
  the instrument is the magneto-optical filter [1] that can be operated
  using vapor cells containing K, Na, Ca and He. The instrument is also
  designed to have a high-resolution imaging mode that will provide 1
  arc-second resolution over a FOV of 450x450 square arc-seconds. The
  instrument is scheduled for deployment to South Pole during the Austral
  summer of 2005/2006. This work is funded by award OPP-0338251 from the
  National Science Foundation. [1] Cacciani &amp; Fofi, Solar Phys 59,
  179 (1978)

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Travel Time and Phase Analysis of Waves in the Lower Solar
    Chromosphere
Authors: Fleck, B.; Armstrong, J.; Cacciani, A.; de Pontieu, B.;
   Finsterle, W.; Jefferies, S. M.; McIntosh, S. W.; Tarbell, T. D.
2005AGUSMSH13C..04F    Altcode:
  In an effort to better understand how the chromospheric plasma and
  magnetic fields are guiding, converting and dissipating acoustic waves,
  we analyze high-cadence time series taken in Na I D2 589.0 nm and K I
  769.9 nm that were obtained with the Magneto Optical Filters at Two
  Heights (MOTH) experiment at the South Pole in January 2003. These
  data are complemented by a very high spatial resolution time series
  taken in Na D with the Swedish Vacuum Solar Telescope in June 1992. The
  travel time maps, power maps, and phase diagrams show some unexpected
  behaviour, in particular in and around active regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling Solar Oscillation Power Spectra. I. Adaptive Response
    Function for Doppler Velocity Measurements
Authors: Vorontsov, Sergei V.; Jefferies, Stuart M.
2005ApJ...623.1202V    Altcode:
  Improving the accuracy and resolution of helioseismic inversions
  calls for more accurate modeling of the observational p-mode power
  spectra from which the solar oscillation frequencies are traditionally
  measured. We present a new technique of calculating the response
  function (leakage matrix) for Doppler velocity measurements that is
  based largely on an analytical description of the relevant instrumental
  and physical effects. The computational efficiency of the new approach
  allows us to implement the response function in an adaptive manner:
  i.e., the compensation for instrumental or optical distortions of
  unknown magnitude can be performed as a part of the spectral fitting
  procedure.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from South Pole: Past, Present, and Future
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.
2005HiA....13..966J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diagnostic of the Solar Atmosphere through Two Level Doppler
    and Magnetic Measurements
Authors: Cacciani, A.; Rapex, P.; Massa, F.; Briguglio, R.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Finsterle, W.; Giebink, C.; Knox, A.
2005EAS....14..269C    Altcode:
  This contribution describes our solar project at the Antarctic sites
  of Baia Terranova, South Pole and Dome-C. The project is based on a
  multi-level helioseismology analysis, aimed to study, for the first
  time, the local properties of the solar atmosphere. In addition,
  we plan to detect the presence of Alfvèn waves in and around the
  active regions, as an energy transfer vehicle from sunspots towards
  the corona. The technology used is the well known compact, stable,
  relatively unexpensive and still improving MOF (Magneto-Optical Filter).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Global Helioseismic Metrology
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Vorontsov, S. V.; Giebink, C.
2004ESASP.559..254J    Altcode: 2004soho...14..254J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Acoustic Waves Reveal the Magnetic Topology of the Solar
    Atmosphere
Authors: Finsterle, W.; Jefferies, S. M.; Cacciani, A.; Rapex, P.
2004ESASP.559..223F    Altcode: 2004soho...14..223F
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An Alternative Interpretation of the Double-Ridge Structure
    in the - Frequency Time-Distance Autocorrelation Function?
Authors: Sekii, T.; Shibahashi, H.; Jefferies, S. M.
2004ESASP.559..619S    Altcode: 2004soho...14..619S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismic Mapping of the Magnetic Canopy in the Solar
    Chromosphere
Authors: Finsterle, W.; Jefferies, S. M.; Cacciani, A.; Rapex, P.;
   McIntosh, S. W.
2004ApJ...613L.185F    Altcode:
  We determine the three-dimensional topography of the magnetic canopy
  in and around active regions by mapping the propagation behavior of
  high-frequency acoustic waves in the solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Seismology of the solar atmosphere
Authors: Finsterle, Wolfgang; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Cacciani,
   Alessandro; Rapex, Paolo; Giebink, Cynthia; Knox, Allister; DiMartino,
   Vincenzo
2004SoPh..220..317F    Altcode:
  We describe a new instrument for seismically probing the properties
  of the Sun's lower atmosphere, and present some first results from
  an observational campaign carried out at the geographic South Pole
  during the austral summer of 2002/2003. A preliminary analysis of the
  data (simultaneous, high-cadence observations of the velocity signals
  from the photosphere and low chromosphere) shows that the well-known
  suppression of acoustic power in regions of strong magnetic field, and
  enhancement of high-frequency power around active regions (acoustic
  halos), are both consistent with a spreading out of the magnetic
  field lines with increasing height in the atmosphere. The data have
  also revealed some unexpected wave behavior. First, evanescent-like
  waves are found at frequencies substantially above the acoustic
  cut-off frequency in regions of intermediate magnetic field. Second,
  upward- and downward-propagating waves are detected in areas of strong
  magnetic field such as sunspots and plage: even at frequencies below
  the acoustic cut-off frequency. Third, the wave behavior in regions
  of strong magnetic field can change over periods of a few hours from
  propagating to evanescent. While we have no concrete explanation for the
  first two results, the latter result opens up the question of whether
  sound waves are involved in short-term events such as flares or CME's.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A New Way to Model the Solar Oscillation ℓ−ν Power
    Spectrum
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Vorontsov, Sergei V.
2004SoPh..220..347J    Altcode:
  We present a new approach for the precise and accurate forward modeling
  of the solar oscillation ℓ−ν power spectrum. The approach is
  designed to provide the basis for a streamlined solar seismic inversion
  without measurements of the p-mode frequencies. The new strategy
  represents a paradigm change in how information is extracted from the
  oscillation spectrum. It also represents a step toward the ideal case
  of inferring the Sun's properties directly from the raw observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: How Well Can We Infer the Properties of the Solar Acoustic
    Sources?
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Severino, Giuseppe; Moretti,
   Pier-Francesco; Oliviero, Maurizio; Giebink, Cynthia
2003ApJ...596L.117J    Altcode:
  Measurements of the p-mode line asymmetry in the solar oscillation
  velocity power spectrum have been used on several occasions to infer
  the properties of the acoustic sources. These inferences are based on
  the assumption that, unlike the observed intensity signal, the velocity
  signal does not contain a nonresonant (background) component that is
  correlated with the p-mode signal. Line asymmetry measurements have also
  been used to draw inferences on the nature of the correlated background
  signal that is present in intensity observations. By simultaneously
  modeling the observed velocity and intensity power spectra and the
  intensity-velocity cross spectrum, we enforce strict observational
  constraints on the properties of the fitting model. We find that in
  order to accurately describe the observed data, we have to include
  a correlated background component in both our models for the V and
  I signals at low frequencies. Our results also show that we cannot
  uniquely determine the acoustic source depth for low-frequency waves
  or the detailed properties of the correlated background signals. It
  appears that further physical and/or observational constraints are
  needed before we can obtain this information.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A new instrument for sounding the solar atmosphere
Authors: Cacciani, A.; Jefferies, S. M.; Finsterle, W.; Rapex, P.;
   Knox, A.; Giebink, C.; di Martino, V.
2003ESASP.517..243C    Altcode: 2003soho...12..243C
  A new instrument based on Magneto-Optical Filters (MOFs) (Cacciani
  et al., 1994) will be used to simultaneously map the line-of-sight
  velocity at two heights in the solar atmosphere. Simultaneous Doppler
  images of 5 arc-seconds resolution will be taken in the K I (7699 Å)
  and Na I D<SUB>2</SUB> (5890 Å) lines, which are separated by a few
  hundred kilometers in the solar atmosphere (Grossman-Doerth, 1994). By
  cross correlating the signals of the K and Na channels we will be able
  to determine the travel time and thus the propagation speed of sound
  waves in the solar atmosphere. The experiment will be run at the South
  Pole during austral summer of 2002/2003.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Comments on inferring the properties of the solar acoustic
    sources by modeling the velocity and/or intensity fluctuations
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Moretti, Pier-Francesco; Oliviero,
   Maurizio; Giebink, Cynthia
2003ESASP.517..311J    Altcode: 2003soho...12..311J
  We model the observed velocity and intensity power spectra and the
  intensity-velocity cross-spectrum using an updated version of the
  Severino et al. (2001) model that includes the effects of the acoustic
  source. We find that in order to accurately describe the data it
  is necessary to include a correlated background component in both
  the V and I signals at low frequencies, and in the I signal at high
  frequencies. Preliminary results show that even using the new model we
  can not uniquely determine the phase that is related to the acoustic
  source depth at low frequencies, or the amplitudes and phases of the
  individual correlated background signals. It appears that further
  physical or observational constraints are needed before we can obtain
  this information.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Seismology of the Solar Atmosphere
Authors: Finsterle, Wolfgang; Rapex, Paolo; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   Cacciani, Alessandro; Giebink, Cynthia; Knox, Allister
2003IAUJD..12E..18F    Altcode:
  We use full-disk Dopplergrams simultaneously acquired using the K1
  (770 nm) and Na D2 (589 nm) Fraunhofer lines to examine the acoustic
  properties of Sun's atmosphere. We present preliminary results of the
  use of acoustic waves with frequencies beyond the cut-off frequency for
  the solar atmosphere (~ 5mHz) to map the spatial and temporal changes
  in the vertical wave travel time between the mid-chromosphere and
  low-photosphere over a period of a single solar rotation. These types
  of maps should provide a strong constraint for models of the solar
  atmosphere . The data used for the analysis were obtained at South
  Pole during January 2003 and represent four uninterrupted stretches
  of between 46 and 106 hours.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A two color pupil imaging method to detect stellar oscillations
Authors: Cacciani, A.; Dolci, M.; Jefferies, S. M.; Finsterle, W.;
   Fossat, E.; Sigismondi, C.; Cesario, L.; Bertello, L.; Varadi, F.
2003MSAIS...2..172C    Altcode:
  Observations of stellar intensity oscillations from the ground are
  strongly affected by intensity fluctuations caused by the atmosphere
  (scintillation). However, by using a differential observational method
  that images the pupil of the telescope in two colors at the same
  time on a single CCD, we can partially compensate for this source of
  atmospheric noise (which is color dependant) as well as other problems,
  such as guiding and saturation. Moreover, by placing instruments at
  different locations (eg. Dome C and South Pole) we can further reduce
  the atmospheric noise contribution by using cross-spectral methods,
  such as Random Lag Singular Cross-Spectrum Analysis (RLSCA). (We
  also decrease the likelihood of gaps in the data string due to
  bad weather). The RLSCA method is well suited for extracting common
  oscillatory components from two or more observations, including their
  relative phases. We have evaluated the performance of our method
  using real data from SOHO. We find that our differential algorithm can
  recover the absolute amplitudes of the solar intensity oscillations
  with an efficiency of 70%. We are currently carrying out tests using a
  number of telescopes, including Big Bear, Mt. Wilson, Teramo and Milano,
  while waiting for the South Pole and Dome C sites to become available.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: CONCORDIASTRO/Italy: A Solar High-Resolution Observation
    Program at Dome-C
Authors: Severino, G.; Andretta, V.; Berrilli, F.; Cascone, E.;
   Centrone, M.; Criscuoli, S.; Del Moro, D.; Ermolli, I.; Giorgi, F.;
   Jefferies, S. M.; Magri, M.; Moretti, P. F.; Oliviero, M.; Parisi,
   L.; V; Porzio; Smaldone, L. A.; Straus, Th.
2003MSAIS...2..181S    Altcode:
  CONCORDIASTRO is the Nice-Napoli joint project for site
  testing of the Dome C for solar and stellar astronomy in the
  visible. CONCORDIASTRO/Italy is the solar physics part of this project,
  whose the Napoli team has the principal responsibility. Beyond the
  well-known interest for the helioseismology, CONCORDIASTRO/Italy pointed
  out that, because of its special atmospheric conditions, Dome C promises
  to be one of the best sites on Earth to perform high-resolution solar
  physics. Here we review the basis for this statement and the solar
  observations program planned by CONCORDIASTRO/Italy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from South Pole: Past, Present and Future
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.
2003IAUSS...2E..15J    Altcode:
  From the early 1980's through to the middle of the 1990's helioseismic
  observations from South Pole played a significant role in improving
  our understanding of the Sun's interior. Not only with fundamental
  measurements such as the determination of the internal sound speed
  and rotational profiles but also with the development of important
  techniques such as time-distance analysis. However the advent of global
  networks of observing sites and space-based instruments in the mid-1990s
  eventually led to the end of this ""golden era"" for South Pole Solar
  Observatory (SPSO) for traditional helioseismology. <P />The Austral
  summer of 2002/2003 saw the ressurection of SPSO for a new generation
  of helioseismic observations to probe the characteristics of the solar
  atmosphere. This paper describes these new observations and discusses
  how they might evolve in the future.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: a New way to Model the Solar Oscillation Power Spectrum
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Vorontsov, Sergei V.
2003IAUJD..12E..33J    Altcode:
  We will present a new technique for directly characterizing large
  regions of the solar oscillation velocity power spectrum using a solar
  seismic model. We will discus the implications of this paradigm change
  in how information is extracted from the oscillation spectrum.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mapping the Sound Speed Structure of the Sun's Atmosphere
Authors: Cacciani, A.; Jefferies, S. M.; Finsterle, W.; Giebink, C.;
   Knox, A.; Rapex, P.; Subrizi, B.; Cesario, L.
2003MSAIS...2..190C    Altcode:
  We describe an instrument for seismically probing the acoustic
  properties of the Sun's lower atmosphere. The instrument, which
  is based on magneto-optical filter technology, acquires full-disk
  Dopplergrams simultaneously in the K D1 (770 nm) and Na D2 (589
  nm) Fraunhofer lines. The Dopplergrams have a spatial resolution
  of ~5 arc secs and are recorded at a cadence of one frame every 10
  seconds, average from 16 frames per second. These data allow us to
  use acoustic waves with frequencies beyond the cut-off frequency for
  the solar atmosphere (~5mHz) to map the spatial and temporal changes
  in the vertical wave travel time between the mid-chromosphere and the
  low-photosphere. These types of maps will provide a strong constraint
  for models of the solar atmosphere and possibly study early warnings
  for explosive phenomena. We present some preliminary results from
  observations made at the geographical South Pole during the 2002/2003
  Austral summer. We also discuss our program for the next campaign
  with instrumental improvements as far as a third level Dopplergram and
  magnetographic capability. We also consider cloning the instrument for
  Dome C in order to further minimize atmospheric noise and gaps in the
  data string due to bad weather.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Imaging through turbid media: post processing using blind
    deconvolution
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Schulze, Kathy J.; Matson, Charles L.;
   Hege, E. Keith; Stoltenberg, Kurt
2001SPIE.4490..282J    Altcode:
  How to obtain sharp images when viewing through a turbid medium
  is a problem that arises in a number of applications, including
  optical biomedical imaging and optical surveillance in the presence
  of clouds. The main problem with this type of imagery is that it is
  difficult to accurately characterize the turbid medium sufficiently
  well to generate a point spread function that can be used to deconvolve
  the blurred data (and thus increase the resolution). We discuss the
  use of blind deconvolution as a means of estimating both the blur-free
  target and the system point spread function. We compare restorations
  obtained using a non-linear blind deconvolution algorithm with those
  obtained using a linear backpropagation algorithm. Preliminary results
  indicate that the blind deconvolution algorithm produces the more
  visually pleasing restorations. Moreover, it does so without requiring
  any prior knowledge of the characteristics of the turbid medium, or
  of what the blur-free target should look like: an important advance
  over the backpropagation algorithm.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Intensity-Velocity Cross Spectrum: A Powerful
    Diagnostic for Helioseismology
Authors: Severino, G.; Magrì, M.; Oliviero, M.; Straus, Th.;
   Jefferies, S. M.
2001ApJ...561..444S    Altcode:
  We show that the solar intensity-velocity cross spectrum provides
  a sensitive diagnostic for the interaction between the oscillatory
  and nonoscillatory components of the solar velocity and intensity
  signals. In particular, we demonstrate that to simultaneously model the
  V and I power spectra, the I-V coherence spectrum, and the I-V phase
  difference spectrum requires a coherent, correlated background signal
  and a coherent, uncorrelated signal in both intensity and velocity. We
  speculate that these signals may be related to the “acoustic events”
  observed recently by Goode and colleagues. We also show why caution
  should be exercised in the interpretation of model fit parameters
  based only on measurements of the velocity or intensity power spectra,
  or both: specifically, the parameters associated with the oscillation
  source characteristics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-Wavelength Observations of Solar Fine-Structure with
High Spatial Resolution (CD-ROM Directory: contribs/denker)
Authors: Denker, C.; Spirock, T. J.; Jefferies, S. M.; Chen, H.;
   Marquette, W. H.; Wang, H.; Goode, P. R.
2001ASPC..223..607D    Altcode: 2001csss...11..607D
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: New approach to Rayleigh guide beacons
Authors: Lloyd-Hart, Michael; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Hege, E. Keith;
   Angel, J. Roger P.
2000SPIE.4007..277L    Altcode:
  We present analysis and numerical simulations of a new method to
  sense atmospheric wavefront distortion in real time with Rayleigh
  beacons. Multiple range-gated images of a single pulse from the laser
  are used to determine each phase map, providing an advantage over
  other methods in that photon noise is substantially reduced for a given
  brightness of the beacon. A laser at about 350 nm projects collimated
  pulses of light adjacent to the telescope. Rayleigh-scattered light from
  each pulse is recorded through the full telescope aperture in a sequence
  of video frames, each a few microseconds long. Images are captured as
  the pulse approaches and passes through the height at which the camera
  is focused. Phase diversity is thus naturally introduced between the
  frames. An iterative algorithm is used to extract the pupil-plane
  phases from the recorded intensity distributions. We anticipate that
  such beacons are likely to be valuable in future advanced systems for
  adaptive optics on very large telescopes with multiple laser beacons
  and deformable mirrors that aim to provide a large corrected field of
  view by tomography of the atmospheric turbulence.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Two-dimensional Modeling of the Solar Oscillation l-ν Power
    Spectrum
Authors: Meunier, Nadège; Jefferies, Stuart M.
2000ApJ...530.1016M    Altcode:
  We describe an algorithm which can accurately model the spatial-temporal
  l-ν solar oscillation power spectrum over large ranges in frequency
  (ν) and degree (l). We show how modeling in two dimensions provides
  a better representation of the observed spectrum than can be obtained
  with traditional one-dimensional approaches. The gain comes from
  using more of the observed signal to constrain the model and improved
  descriptions of the solar background spectrum and the signal leakage
  between different spatial scales. We discuss the level of systematic
  error that can be expected in the solar oscillation mode frequency
  data published to date.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: I-V phase difference and gain analysis of GONG full-disk data
Authors: Oliviero, M.; Severino, G.; Straus, T.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Appourchaux, T.
2000MmSAI..71..999O    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Object-independent point spread function and wavefront phase
    estimation
Authors: Christou, Julian C.; Jefferies, Stuart M.; Hege, E. Keith
1999SPIE.3762..201C    Altcode:
  We demonstrate the recovery, without a priori object knowledge,
  of the unknown object and point spread functions (PSFs) from
  multiframe focal-plane data. By modeling the object Fourier spectrum
  as an unprejudiced linear combination of the cross-spectra of the
  measurements and the PSFs, we significantly reduce the number of
  degrees-of- freedom for the blind deconvolution problem.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Improving the signal-to-noise ratio in solar oscillation
    spectra
Authors: García, R. A.; Jefferies, S. M.; Toner, C. G.; Pallé, P. L.
1999A&A...346L..61G    Altcode:
  We describe a data analysis technique for helioseismology that
  provides a reduction in the contamination of the solar oscillation
  spectrum from incoherent noise. We show that the technique allows:
  (i) a significant improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio for the
  modes in the oscillation power spectrum, and (ii) the solar velocity
  background spectrum to be observed at low frequencies using ground-based
  observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Increasing the Visibility of Solar Oscillations
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.; Toutain, T.
1999ApJ...518L.127T    Altcode:
  Recent calculations by Toutain, Berthomieu, &amp; Provost predict that
  low-degree p- and g-modes should produce large continuum intensity
  perturbations close to the solar limb. Analysis of 72 hr of spatially
  resolved, full-disk, continuum intensity images of the Sun--obtained
  with the Solar Oscillations Investigation/Michelson Doppler Imager
  instrument on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory--verifies
  the theoretical prediction for the p-mode signal. The p-mode amplitude
  for observations of the solar limb is found to be more than twice that
  for observations of the solar disk. In addition, the low-frequency
  background level is substantially reduced over that measured using
  a full-disk analysis. The combination of these two effects suggests
  that observing the solar limb signal could significantly enhance our
  chances of detecting g-modes and low-frequency p-modes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observational Constraints on Models of the Solar Background
    Spectrum
Authors: Straus, Th.; Severino, G.; Deubner, F. -L.; Fleck, B.;
   Jefferies, S. M.; Tarbell, T.
1999ApJ...516..939S    Altcode:
  We discuss the properties of the solar background signal as observed in
  high-quality, l-ν power and phase difference spectra of the continuum
  (C), velocity (V), and line intensity (I) fluctuations of the Ni
  I 6768 Å line. These spectra were generated from high-resolution
  images acquired by the Michelson Doppler Imager on board SOHO. <P />We
  confirm that the background signal in the velocity power spectra can be
  reproduced by a composite model with two quasi-stationary components,
  describing large-scale and small-scale convective motions, and a
  periodic component. The line and continuum intensity power spectra
  require additional quasi-stationary and periodic components. The
  extra quasi-stationary component dominates the intensity and
  continuum background signals over the spectral region where the I-V
  phase difference spectra show essentially constant negative phase
  difference: i.e., below and in between the p-mode ridges (called the
  plateau-interridge regime by Deubner et al.). Since the I-V phase
  between the p-mode ridges is not random, the solar background beneath
  the p-modes must be considered as coherent. We thus speculate that
  the negative phase regime may be the manifestation of a correlated
  background. Such a background has been proposed to explain the opposite
  sense of the asymmetries of the p-mode line profiles in velocity and
  brightness oscillations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Space and Time Analysis of the Solar Photospheric Dynamics
    at Moderate-l Values
Authors: Oliviero, M.; Severino, G.; Straus, Th.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Appourchaux, T.
1999ApJ...516L..45O    Altcode:
  A space-time analysis of 36 days' worth of full-disk intensity and
  velocity images, obtained by the Global Oscillation Network Group,
  is used to produce a high-resolution l-ν phase-difference spectrum
  for the spectral range (4&lt;=l&lt;=2000, 0&lt;=ν&lt;=8.3 mHz). This
  is the first time a phase-difference spectrum has been produced for
  intermediate-l values. The phase differences on the p-mode ridges
  are found to linearly increase from ~65° at 2 mHz up to ~95°
  at 4.7 mHz. Only near 3.9 mHz are the differences close to 90°,
  the theoretically expected phase for adiabatic evanescent waves. The
  phases between the ridges exhibit a steplike behavior in frequency with
  negative values at low frequency and positive values (greater than 90°)
  at high frequency. The negative phase values are consistent with the
  extension to low- and moderate-l values of the plateau-interridge regime
  discovered by Deubner et al. in 1990. However, positive phase values,
  which represent higher phase for the solar background than for the
  acoustic modes, were not expected. An understanding of this observed
  phase-difference behavior will improve our knowledge of the nature of
  the solar background and its interaction with the acoustic p-modes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-Frequency Peaks in the Power Spectrum of Solar Velocity
    Observations from the GOLF Experiment
Authors: García, R. A.; Pallé, P. L.; Turck-Chièze, S.; Osaki,
   Y.; Shibahashi, H.; Jefferies, S. M.; Boumier, P.; Gabriel, A. H.;
   Grec, G.; Robillot, J. M.; Roca Cortés, T.; Ulrich, R. K.
1998ApJ...504L..51G    Altcode:
  The power spectrum of more than 630 days of full-disk solar velocity
  data, provided by the GOLF spectrophotometer aboard the Solar and
  Heliospheric Observatory, has revealed the presence of modelike
  structure well beyond the acoustic cutoff frequency for the solar
  atmosphere (ν<SUB>ac</SUB>~5.4 mHz). Similar data produced by
  full-disk instruments deployed in Earth-based networks (BiSON and
  IRIS) had not shown any peak structure above ν<SUB>ac</SUB>: this
  is probably due to the higher levels of noise that are inherent in
  Earth-based experiments. We show that the observed peak structure
  (ν<SUB>ac</SUB>&lt;=ν&lt;=7.5 mHz) can be explained by a simple
  two-wave interference model if the high-frequency waves are partially
  reflected at the back side of the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Acoustic interferometry of the solar atmosphere: p-modes with
    frequencies near the `acoustic cut-off'
Authors: Vorontsov, S. V.; Jefferies, S. M.; Duval, T. L., Jr.;
   Harvey, J. W.
1998MNRAS.298..464V    Altcode:
  High-frequency p-mode intensity data, obtained from the South Pole in
  1987, 1988, 1990 and 1994, show a sharp variation in the phase-shift
  function and in the frequency spacings near 5.5 mHz. Using a simple
  theoretical model, we demonstrate that this behaviour is caused by an
  acoustic resonance in the atmosphere between the excitation source and
  the upper reflection level. We discuss the diagnostic properties of this
  resonance, which is sensitive to the acoustic reflectivity of the solar
  atmosphere and to the location and parity of the excitation source. When
  applied to the solar data, our model indicates that the average acoustic
  reflectivity increases with increasing solar activity. The model also
  shows that the acoustic source has composite parity and is located
  within one pressure scaleheight of the base of the photosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active optical fringe tracking at the NPOI
Authors: Benson, James A.; Mozurkewich, David; Jefferies, Stuart M.
1998SPIE.3350..493B    Altcode:
  The Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer is routinely used to measure
  visibility amplitudes and closure phase for stellar objects at optical
  wavelengths. In this poster we describe the fringe data collection
  aspects and the real time algorithm that enables us to actively track
  fringes with the instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Estimated Mode Parameters from the Fitting of GONG Spectra
Authors: Hill, F.; Anderson, E.; Howe, R.; Jefferies, S. M.; Komm,
   R.; Toner, C.
1998ESASP.418..231H    Altcode: 1998soho....6..231H
  The estimation of mode parameters is a critical step in the helioseismic
  data reduction process. Several estimation methods are currently in
  use, and a comparison of the resulting frequencies from a common data
  set shows small, yet significant, differences. This suggests that the
  fitting procedures can introduce systematic errors. These errors will
  affect subsequent inversions of the data. For example, the presence of
  a high-latitude jet in the solar rotation rate appears to depend on the
  type of spectral fitting used to estimate the splitting coefficients. In
  addition, as the available helioseismic observations have improved,
  it has become apparent that several effects have been neglected in the
  peak fitting techniques. These effects include line profile asymmetry,
  coupling between the background and the mode signal, fine details in
  the leakage matrix, and the differences in the oscillation spectrum
  when observed in Doppler velocity or total intensity. Here we report
  on the latest GONG fitting methods and present the resulting mode
  parameter estimates. The GONG fitting technique now includes improved
  mode quality assurance checks and asymmetrical line profiles. Currently
  under development are multi-dimensional fitting, multi-taper time
  series analysis, background/mode coupling, simultaneous fitting
  of velocity and intensity spectra, and the inclusion of a leakage
  matrix. The improvements have resulted in higher-quality frequency
  estimates that are now being computed for 108-day long time series
  spaced by 36 days. After completion, each frequency table is made
  freely available to the helioseismic community.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-frequency (Pseudo-) modes
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.
1998IAUS..185..415J    Altcode:
  I will review the properties of the solar oscillation powerspectrum at
  frequencies near and above the acoustic cut-off frequency (~5.3 mHz). In
  particular, I will show how the line profiles of the high-frequency
  “pseudo-modes” are affected by the properties of the acoustic
  source and the solar atmosphere, and by changes in the level of solar
  activity. Finally, I will examine the potential of the pseudo-modes
  to provide a tomography of the solar chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling the Solar Oscillation l-v Power Spectrum
Authors: Meunier, N.; Jefferies, S. M.
1998ESASP.418..267M    Altcode: 1998soho....6..267M
  We have developed a “two-dimensional” algorithm which simultaneously
  models the ell- ν spectrum over several n-values and a wide
  range of ell-values. In addition to the estimation of the line
  profile parameters, the algorithm also allows a determination of the
  spatial response function for the observations. This is an important
  improvement over algorithms which either rely on theoretical leakage
  matrix calculations, or use many extra free parameters to model the
  features due to spatial leakage. Using intensity data obtained at
  the South Pole, and velocity data from GONG and MDI, we show that 2-D
  modeling allows significant increases in the precision of the measured
  line profile parameters for peaks with low peak-to-background ratios.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Searching for g-modes at the Solar Limb
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1998IAUS..185...55T    Altcode:
  The detection and measurement of solar g-modes is of significant
  importance in the study of the internal structure of the Sun. The g-mode
  signal in intensity is predicted to peak very close to the solar limb
  (T. Toutain, private communication). We are developing a technique which
  differences the signal in a narrow annulus very close to the limb from
  the signal in an adjacent (interior) annulus in order to remove the
  solar background “noise” signal and thus enhance the probability of
  detecting g-modes. Here we present our preliminary results.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Oscillatory Signals Near the Solar Limb
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1998ESASP.418..345T    Altcode: 1998soho....6..345T
  A recent calculation by T. Toutain predicts that the solar p-mode and
  g-mode amplitudes in intensity should peak near the solar limb. We
  use full-disk intensity images of the Sun, obtained at the South Pole
  and with the SOI/MDI instrument on board SOHO, to explore how the
  oscillation signal varies near the solar limb. We divide each observed
  image into narrow annuli and then average in equally spaced bins in
  azimuthal angle. By computing the 2-D FFT of the time series of these
  “sector-annulus” data we can generate “k-ω” diagrams for each
  annulus. Here we present our results.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Background Spectrum: a Gold Mine of Information
Authors: Severino, G.; Straus, Th.; Jefferies, S. M.
1998ESASP.418...53S    Altcode: 1998soho....6...53S
  We discuss the properties of the intensity-velocity (I-V) phase
  difference spectra generated from 15 hours of high resolution MDI
  observations. These spectra provide a spectacular demonstration of the
  wealth of untapped information that is available on the nature of the
  solar background. In this context, the regimes of coherent phase in
  between the modes (“interridges”) and between the f mode and the
  Lamb waves (“plateau”), first discovered by Deubner et al. 1990,
  is of extreme interest. Understanding the background is important for
  several reasons: (i) it contains information about the convection
  processes and the wave propagation characteristics of the solar
  atmosphere in addition to that provided by the resonant oscillations,
  (ii) its interaction with the p-modes may explain why the sense of the
  asymmetry in the p-mode line profiles depends on the dynamic variable
  observed (Roxburgh &amp; Vorontsov 1997, Nigam et al. 1998), (iii)
  estimates for the p-mode line asymmetries are sensitive to errors in
  the background determination, and (iv) the background limits the g-mode
  and low frequency p-mode visibilities. We also propose a new model
  for the solar background which uses the observed phase information:
  previous models (e.g. Harvey 1985) are restricted to power information
  only. Currently, our model is limited to low frequencies (1 mHz &lt;=
  ν &lt;= 3.5 mHz) and intermediate to high ell values, however, it
  still demonstrates the potential of the phase information to improve
  our estimates of the background components of both the velocity and
  intensity signals. A superposition of a correlated background and the
  p-mode signal succeeds in reproducing the observed I-V phase transition
  from negative (background) to positive (p-mode) values. Moreover,
  the model suggests that the background is responsible for the values
  of I-V phase, equal to or less than the adiabatic values observed in
  the low photosphere (Hill et al, 1991).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sounding the Sun's Chromosphere
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Osaki, Y.; Shibahashi, H.; Harvey, J. W.;
   D'Silva, S.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.
1997ApJ...485L..49J    Altcode:
  Time-distance analysis of solar acoustic waves with frequencies above
  the nominal atmospheric acoustic cutoff frequency (~5.3 mHz) shows
  partial reflection of the waves at both the Sun's photosphere and a
  layer located higher in the atmosphere. This result supports recent
  reports of chromospheric modes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Searching for G-MODES at the Solar Limb
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1997SPD....28.0209T    Altcode: 1997BAAS...29..894T
  The detection and measurement of solar g-modes is of significant
  importance in the study of the internal structure of the Sun. The
  g-mode signal in intensity is predicted to peak very close to the solar
  limb. To enhance the probability of detecting g-modes, we have tried to
  reduce the solar background “noise” signal by differencing the signal
  in a narrow annulus at the solar limb from the signal in an adjacent
  (interior) annulus. We will present some preliminary results from a
  study of Ca K-line intensity observations obtained at the South Pole
  during the austral summer of 1995/95.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Restoration of Long-Exposure Full-Disk Solar Intensity Images
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L.
1997ApJ...478..817T    Altcode:
  We describe an algorithm for restoring full-disk solar intensity images
  blurred by a smooth, quasi-stationary point-spread function (PSF). For
  Earth-based observations, this type of data can be obtained by using
  exposure times that are much longer than the redistribution time of
  the atmosphere. Using simulated data for a wide range of observing
  conditions, we show that the algorithm restores data in such a way
  that the RMS difference between an original, unblurred image and the
  restored image is typically less than 1.0%. Thus, we substantially
  improve the photometric precision. The simulations also show that under
  “reasonable” seeing conditions (&lt;~4"), exposure times of 5-10 s are
  adequate to produce smooth calibratable PSFs if the observing instrument
  uses a centroid-shifting tip/tilt wavefront correction. The algorithm
  determines the PSF for each observation directly from the recorded
  image and does not require separate measurements of point sources.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismic Tomography
Authors: D'Silva, Sydney; Duvall, Thomas L., Jr.; Jefferies, Stuart
   M.; Harvey, John W.
1996ApJ...471.1030D    Altcode:
  "Helioseismic tomography" is a method using observations to construct
  slices of the Sun's internal structure. It is based on a reduction of
  observations to time-distance surfaces and hypersurfaces. We present
  a procedure for measuring time-distance surfaces and hypersurfaces,
  and thereby a method of studying localized inhomogeneities in the
  interior of the Sun, such as abnormalities in the sound speed (e.g., a
  thermal shadow, Parker 1987a), or local subsurface flows, or magnetic
  fields. We also present a simulation of measuring time-distance
  surfaces and illustrate how to measure the size of an inhomogeneity,
  its location in depth, and the deviation of its sound speed compared
  to its local surroundings.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Doppler Acoustic Diagnostics of Subsurface Solar Magnetic
    Structure
Authors: Lindsey, C.; Braun, D. C.; Jefferies, S. M.; Woodard, M. F.;
   Fan, Y.; Gu, Y.; Redfield, S.
1996ApJ...470..636L    Altcode:
  We used the Bartol-NSO-NASA South Pole helioseismic observations of 1991
  January to probe the subsurface structure of active regions to depths
  of ∼15,000 km. The helioseismic signature we particularly examine is
  intended to register acoustic Doppler effects caused by horizontal flows
  associated with the active region. We propose to show that the Doppler
  acoustic signature of horizontal flows is particularly well suited
  for deep subsurface diagnostics in terms of vertical discrimination
  of the structure. This study is based primarily on observations of
  NOAA Active Regions 6431, 6432, 6440, and 6442 between 1991 January
  1 and January 8. We interpret the acoustic signatures we find in
  terms of a general outflow of the solar medium surrounding the active
  region. The acoustic signatures are strongly dependent on wavenumber,
  which suggests an outflow that is quite weak near the surface, the upper
  4000 km of the subphotosphere, but which increases strongly with depth
  to velocities of several hundred meters per second at 15,000 km. This
  depth profile evolves rapidly as the active region matures. Young
  active regions show a strong outflow signature for waves that explore
  depths between 4000 and 8000 km. As the active region matures, the
  outflow vacates these intermediate layers and submerges to depths
  mostly below 8000 km. <P />We examine the location of AR 6442 for a
  possible preemergence signature. We also show evidence for extended,
  relatively superficial flows in the quiet Sun between the active region
  bands directed roughly into the active region bands.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamics of the Chromospheric Network: Mobility, Dispersal,
    and Diffusion Coefficients
Authors: Schrijver, Carolus J.; Shine, Richard A.; Hagenaar, Hermance
   J.; Hurlburt, Neal E.; Title, Alan M.; Strous, Louis H.; Jefferies,
   Stuart M.; Jones, Andrew R.; Harvey, John W.; Duvall, Thomas L., Jr.
1996ApJ...468..921S    Altcode:
  Understanding the physics behind the dispersal of photo spheric magnetic
  flux is crucial to studies of magnetoconvection, dynamos, and stellar
  atmospheric activity. The rate of flux dispersal is often quantified by
  a diffusion coefficient, D. Published values of D differ by more than a
  factor of 2, which is more than the uncertainties allow. We propose that
  the discrepancies between the published values for D are the result of
  a correlation between the mobility and flux content of concentrations of
  magnetic flux. This conclusion is based on measurements of displacement
  velocities of Ca II K mottles using an uninterrupted 2 day sequence
  of filtergrams obtained at the South Pole near cycle minimum. We
  transform the Ca II K intensity to an equivalent magnetic flux density
  through a power-law relationship defined by a comparison with a nearly
  simultaneously observed magnetogram. One result is that, wherever the
  network is clearly defined in the filtergrams, the displacement vectors
  of the mottles are preferentially aligned with the network, suggesting
  that network-aligned motions are more important to field dispersal than
  deformation of the network pattern by cell evolution. The rms value
  of the inferred velocities, R = &lt;|v|<SUP>2</SUP>&gt;<SUP>½</SUP>,
  decreases with increasing flux, Φ, contained in the mottles, from R
  ≍ 240 m s<SUP>-1</SUP> down to 140 s<SUP>-1</SUP>. The value of R(Φ)
  appears to be independent of the flux surrounding the concentration,
  to the extreme that it does not matter whether the concentration is
  in a plage or in the network. The determination of a proper effective
  diffusion coefficient requires that the function R(Φ) be weighted
  by the number density n(Φ) of mottles that contain a total flux. We
  find that n(Φ) decreases exponentially with Φ and propose a model
  of continual random splitting and merging of concentrations of flux to
  explain this dependence. Traditional methods used to measure D tend to
  be biased toward the larger, more sluggish flux concentrations. Such
  methods neglect or underestimate the significant effects of the
  relatively large number of the more mobile, smaller concentrations. We
  argue that the effective diffusion coefficient for the dispersal of
  photo spheric magnetic flux is ∼600 km<SUP>2</SUP> s<SUP>-1</SUP>.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismic Measurements of Subsurface Outflows From Sunspots
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Fan, Y.; Lindsey, C.; Jefferies, S. M.
1996AAS...188.6911B    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28Q.937B
  We measure the mean frequencies of acoustic waves propagating toward
  and away from sunspots employing a spot-centered Fourier-Hankel
  decomposition of p-mode amplitudes as measured from observations made at
  the South Pole in 1988 and 1991. There is a significant frequency shift
  between the inward and outward traveling waves which is consistent with
  the Doppler effect of a radial outflow from the sunspots. For p-modes
  of temporal frequencies of 3 mHz it is observed that the frequency
  shift decreases slightly with spatial frequency, for modes with degree
  l between 160 to 600. From the l dependence of the frequency shift, we
  infer that the mean radial outflow within the observed annular region
  (which extends between 30 and 137 Mm from the spots) increases nearly
  linearly with depth, reaching a magnitude of about 200 m/s at a depth
  of 20 Mm. This outflow exhibits properties similar to flows recently
  reported by Lindsey, et al. (1996 ApJ submitted) using spatially
  sensitive local helioseismic techniques. This work is supported by
  NSF Grant AST 9496171 and NASA Grant NAGW-4143.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diagnostics of a Subsurface Radial Outflow From a Sunspot
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Fan, Y.; Lindsey, C.; Jefferies, S. M.
1996astro.ph..3078B    Altcode:
  We measure the mean frequencies of acoustic waves propagating toward
  and away from a sunspot employing a spot-centered Fourier-Hankel
  decomposition of p-mode amplitudes as measured from a set of
  observations made at the South Pole in 1991. We demonstrate that
  there is a significant frequency shift between the inward and outward
  traveling waves which is consistent with the Doppler effect of a radial
  outflow from the sunspot. For p-modes of temporal frequencies of 3
  mHz it is observed that the frequency shift decreases slightly with
  spatial frequency, for modes with degree l between 160 to 600. From
  the l dependence of the frequency shift, we infer that the mean radial
  outflow within the observed annular region (which extends between 30 and
  137 Mm from the spot) increases nearly linearly with depth, reaching a
  magnitude of about 200 m/s at a depth of 20 Mm. This outflow exhibits
  properties similar to flows recently reported by Lindsey, et al. (1996)
  using spatially sensitive local helioseismic techniques.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Downflows under sunspots detected by helioseismic tomography
Authors: Duvall, T. L.; D'Silva, S.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.;
   Schou, J.
1996Natur.379..235D    Altcode:
  SUNSPOTS are areas of cooler gas and stronger magnetic fields in the
  Sun's photosphere (its 'surface'), but just how they form and are
  maintained has long been a puzzle. It has been proposed<SUP>1</SUP>
  that small vertical magnetic flux tubes, generated deep within the Sun,
  develop downflows around them when they emerge at the surface. The
  downflows bring together a large number of flux tubes in a cluster
  to form a sunspot, which behaves as a single flux bundle as long as
  the downflows bind the flux tubes together. Until now, however,
  it has not been possible to test this model with subsurface
  observations. Here we use the recently developed technique of
  travel-time helioseismology<SUP>2</SUP> to detect the presence of
  strong downflows beneath both sunspots and the bright features known
  as plages. The flows have a velocity of ~2 kms<SUP>-1</SUP>, and they
  persist to a depth of about 2,000 km. The data suggest, however, that
  the vertical magnetic field can be a coherent flux bundle only to a
  depth of ~600 km; below this depth it is possible that the downflows
  hold together a loose collection of flux tubes to maintain the sunspots
  that we see.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Speckle deconvolution imaging using an iterative algorithm
Authors: Christou, Julian C.; Hege, E. Keith; Jefferies, Stuart M.
1995SPIE.2566..134C    Altcode:
  We present an application of an iterative deconvolution algorithm
  to speckle interferometric data. This blind deconvolution algorithm
  permits the recovery of the target distribution when the point spread
  function is either unknown or poorly known. The algorithm is applied to
  specklegrams of the multiple star systems, and the results for (zetz)
  UMa are compared to shift-and-add results for the same data. The
  linearity of the algorithm is demonstrated and the signal-to-noise
  ratio of the reconstruction is shown to grow as the square root of
  the number of specklegrams used. This algorithm does not require the
  use of an unresolved target for point spread function calibration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mapping Wave Speed in the Outer Convection Zone
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.
1995SPD....26..105D    Altcode: 1995BAAS...27..950D
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Restoring Full Disk Solar Images
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1994AAS...185.4403T    Altcode: 1994BAAS...26.1377T
  The Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) for a full-disk solar intensity
  image can be estimated using the zero crossing properties of the
  Fourier Transform of the image (Toner &amp; Jefferies 1993). We show
  that the MTF can be used to restore an image for the adverse effects of
  the earth's atmosphere and the measurement instrument's optics. The
  restoration process can be approximated for the special case of
  helioseismic analysis by using the estimated MTFs, after calibration
  onto a spherical harmonic degree l scale, to correct the time series
  of spherical harmonic transform coefficients.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Use of Acoustic Wave Travel-Time Measurements to Probe the
    Near-Surface Layers of the Sun
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Osaki, Y.; Shibahashi, H.; Duvall, T. L.,
   Jr.; Harvey, J. W.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1994ApJ...434..795J    Altcode:
  The variation of solar p-mode travel times with cyclic frequency
  nu is shown to provide information on both the radial variation of
  the acoustic potential and the depth of the effective source of the
  oscillations. Observed travel-time data for waves with frequency
  lower than the acoustic cutoff frequency for the solar atmosphere
  (approximately equals 5.5 mHz) are inverted to yield the local acoustic
  cutoff frequency nu<SUB>c</SUB> as a function of depth in the outer
  convection zone and lower atmosphere of the Sun. The data for waves
  with nu greater than 5.5 mHz are used to show that the source of the
  p-mode oscillations lies approximately 100 km beneath the base of the
  photosphere. This depth is deeper than that determined using a standard
  mixing-length calculation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Application of multiframe iterative blind deconvolution for
    diverse astronomical imaging
Authors: Christou, Julian C.; Hege, E. Keith; Jefferies, Stuart M.;
   Keller, Christoph U.
1994SPIE.2200..433C    Altcode: 1994aisi.conf..433C
  We present applications of a recently developed iterative blind
  deconvolution algorithm to both simulated and real data. The
  applications demonstrate the algorithm's performance for a wide range
  of astronomical imaging. We demonstrate the effectiveness of using
  multiple observations of the same object convolved with different
  point spread functions. We also show the extension of the algorithm
  to phase retrieval when the object Fourier amplitude is available.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Limits on Coronal Reflection Using High-Frequency Solar
    Oscillations
Authors: Kumar, P.; Fardal, M. A.; Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L.,
   Jr.; Harvey, J. W.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1994ApJ...422L..29K    Altcode:
  Acoustic waves in the Sun with frequencies above about 5.3 mHz can
  propagate in the chromosphere. We examine imaged solar intensity data
  for evidence of reflection of these waves in the upper chromosphere,
  where the temperature increases by a large factor over a short
  distance. Our method is to compare the observed and theoretically
  derived frequency spacings between peaks in the power spectrum. We find
  that our theoretical frequencies provide the best fit to the data when
  the reflection in the upper atmosphere is eliminated. In particular, the
  model of Kumar (1993b), which includes the source depth, and radiative
  damping, in the calculation of power spectra but ignores chromospheric
  reflection, gives peak frequencies that are in good agreement with
  the observations. For acoustic waves of frequency greater than 6 mHz
  we put an upper limit to the reflectivity of chromosphere and corona,
  using our method, of about 10%. At a given spherical harmonic degree,
  the frequency spacing between peaks in the data generally decreases
  with increasing frequency, because the lower turning point of the
  waves is moving inward. However, between 5 and 5.5 mHz the frequency
  spacing increases slightly. This feature is probably associated
  with the acoustic cutoff frequency in the solar atmosphere, i.e., it
  indicates a transition from trapped waves to propagating waves. We
  are able to reproduce the observed behavior by a crude modeling of
  the solar atmosphere. Further study of these peaks should provide an
  independent way of exploring the mean structure of the solar atmosphere,
  particularly around the temperature minimum region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Blind Deconvolution of HST Simulated Data
Authors: Christou, J. C.; Jefferies, S. M.; Robison, M. W.
1994rhis.conf..212C    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Some Recent Advances in Iterative Blind Deconvolution
    (Invited Review)
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.
1994ASPC...64..619J    Altcode: 1994csss....8..619J
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Accurate Measurement of the Geometry for a Full-Disk Solar
    Image and Estimation of the Observational Point Spread Function
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1993ApJ...415..852T    Altcode:
  We present a new method for accurately determining the geometry for
  full-disk solar intensity images that is insensitive to changes in
  the observational point spread function. The method exploits the
  zero-crossing properties of the Fourier transform of an observed
  image to recover the image's true dimensions and to reconstruct an
  azimuthally averaged estimate for the point spread function. Simulations
  show that the undistorted image dimensions can be reproduced to better
  than 0.01 of a resolution element, and that the point spread function
  can be recovered to within 5% at low spatial frequencies and 15% at
  high spatial frequencies. Preliminary tests with real data confirm
  the results from the simulations and show the method to be robust.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Restoration of Astronomical Images by Iterative Blind
    Deconvolution
Authors: Jefferies, Stuart M.; Christou, Julian C.
1993ApJ...415..862J    Altcode:
  We have developed a modified version of the Iterative Blind
  Deconvolution (IBD) algorithm of Lane, applicable to different types
  of astronomical data. Besides using positivity, convolution, and
  support constraints, we have also applied band-limit, multiple image,
  and Fourier modulus constraints. By using all the available image
  constraining information, we are able to successfully recover object
  and point spread function information from noisy data. The algorithm's
  performance under controlled conditions using simulated data for a
  binary source object, a compact multiple quasi-point source object,
  and an extended object with low contrast are demonstrated. The ability
  of the algorithm to restore information beyond the conventional cutoff
  frequency is also demonstrated. Results are presented for infrared
  speckle imaging of (1) the nearby binary star Gl 914, which resolves
  the secondary component into two stars, and (2) the asteroid 4 Vesta. We
  also present results for "direct" imaging data in the form of a visible
  high-resolution image of Capella and an infrared adaptively corrected
  image of the Galactic center.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Prospects in Helioseismic Holography
Authors: Lindsey, C. A.; Braun, D. C.; Jefferies, S. M.
1993BAAS...25.1220L    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-Distance Helioseismology
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1993BAAS...25.1220D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Asymmetries of Solar Oscillation Line Profiles
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.; Osaki,
   Y.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1993ApJ...410..829D    Altcode:
  Asymmetries of the power spectral line profiles of solar global
  p-modes are detected in full-disk intensity observations of the Ca
  II K Fraunhofer line. The asymmetry is a strong function of temporal
  frequency being strongest at the lowest frequencies observed and
  vanishing near the peak of the power distribution. The variation with
  spherical harmonic degree is small. The asymmetry is interpreted in
  terms of a model in which the solar oscillation cavity is compared
  to a Fabry-Perot interferometer with the source slightly outside
  the cavity. A phase difference between an outward direct wave and
  a corresponding inward wave that passes through the cavity gives
  rise to the asymmetry. The asymmetry is different in velocity and
  intensity observations. Neglecting the asymmetry when modeling the
  power spectrum can lead to systematic errors in the measurement of
  mode frequencies of as much as 10 exp -4 of the mode frequency. The
  present observations and interpretation locate the source of the
  oscillations to be approximately 60 km beneath the photosphere, the
  shallowest position suggested to date.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Time-distance helioseismology
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1993Natur.362..430D    Altcode:
  THE application of seismology to the study of the solar interior1,
  2(helioseismology) has advanced almost solely by the prediction
  and measurement of the Sun's frequencies of free oscillation, or
  normal modes. Direct measurement of the travel times and distances
  of individual acoustic waves-the predominant approach in terrestrial
  seismology<SUP>3</SUP>-would appear to be more difficult in view of the
  number and stochastic nature of solar seismic sources. Here, however,
  we show that it is possible to extract time-distance information from
  temporal cross-correlations of the intensity fluctuations on the solar
  surface. This approach opens the way for seismic studies of local
  solar phenomena, such as subsurface in homogeneities near sunspots,
  and should help to refine global models of the internal velocity
  stratification in the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The P-Mode Scattering Properties of a Sunspot
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Labonte, B. J.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Harvey, M. A.; Pomerantz, J. W.
1993ASPC...42...77B    Altcode: 1993gong.conf...77B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Local Helioseismology of Subsurface Structure
Authors: Lindsey, C.; Braun, D. C.; Jefferies, S. M.
1993ASPC...42...81L    Altcode: 1993gong.conf...81L
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar G-Mode Signatures in P-Mode Signals
Authors: Kennedy, J. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; Hill, F.
1993ASPC...42..273K    Altcode: 1993gong.conf..273K
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Oscillations and the Background Spectrum
Authors: Harvey, J. W.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1993ASPC...42..111H    Altcode: 1993gong.conf..111H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Accurate Measurement of the Geometry for a Full-Disk Solar
    Image and Estimation of the Observational Point Spread Function
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1993ASPC...42..433T    Altcode: 1993gong.conf..433T
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Restoration of Astronomical Images by Blind Iterative
    Deconvolution
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Christou, J. C.
1992AAS...181.1308J    Altcode: 1992BAAS...24.1140J
  Image degradation, whether due to turbulent atmospheric motion and/or
  inherent defects in imaging optics, causes attenuation and/or loss of
  the high-spatial frequency content of astronomical images. Knowledge
  of a point spread function (Psf) permits restoration of these spatial
  frequencies. However, not all Psf's are well behaved and can vary
  both in time and also location across the image. Thus optimal image
  restoration requires both the object and Psf to be restored from a
  “blurred” image. This is known as blind deconvolution. In this paper
  we describe an algorithm that incorporates a priori image information
  as constraints for deconvolution by error metric minimization using a
  conjugate gradient technique. We demonstrate the effectiveness of this
  algorithm to recover a complex object and Psf using simulated speckle
  interferometric data under different signal-to-noise conditions for
  both single and multiple frame input. We present astronomical results
  using both speckle interferometric data, e.g. near-infrared images of 4
  Vesta, and direct near-infrared images of the Galactic Center obtained
  using an adaptive tip-tilt secondary. This work was supported by the
  NSF through grants DPP 89-17626, AST 88-22465 and AST 92-03336.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Local Acoustic Diagnostics of the Solar Interior
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Lindsey, C.; Fan, Y.; Jefferies, S. M.
1992ApJ...392..739B    Altcode:
  Two diagnostic utilities, acoustic power maps, and surface acoustic
  flux maps are used to explore the local diagnostics of magnetic field
  structure in the solar interior. The acoustic power maps, constructed
  from 50 hr of continuous K-line intensity images, show three general
  features: acoustic power deficits at 3 mHz corresponding to surface
  magnetic flux, acoustic power enhancements at 6 mHz surrounding the
  exterior of magnetic regions, and occasional power deficits at 3 mHz
  which extend beyond magnetic regions visible on the surface to regions
  of quiet-sun. Surface acoustic flux vector maps of two active regions
  were constructed for two 6-hr time-series of Dopplergrams. Both maps
  show the divergence of 3-mHz acoustic flux into surface magnetic
  structures and also sources and sinks of wave energy which are not
  associated with surface features.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Scattering of p-Modes by a Sunspot
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Labonte, B. J.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Harvey, J. W.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1992ApJ...391L.113B    Altcode:
  The acoustic scattering properties of a large sunspot are determined
  from a Fourier-Hankel decomposition of p-mode amplitudes as measured
  from a 68-hr subset of a larger set of observations made at the
  South Pole in 1988. It is shown that significant improvement in the
  measurement of p-mode scattering amplitudes results from the increased
  temporal frequency resolution provided by these data. Scattering
  phase shifts are unambiguously determined for the first time, and the
  dependence of the p-mode phase shift and absorption with wavenumber
  and frequency is presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Prospects in Acoustic Holography of the Solar Interior
Authors: Lindsey, C.; Braun, D. C.; Fan, Y.; Jefferies, S. M.
1992AAS...180.1703L    Altcode: 1992BAAS...24..753L
  Acoustic power maps of the solar surface show strong evidence
  of magnetic structure crossing the solar equator not far beneath
  the photosphere to connect the active latitude bands. These maps,
  generated using the Bartol-NSO-NASA South Pole Observations show long
  finger-like acoustic shadows we think are caused by absorption of
  acoustic energy by the submerged magnetic structure. These features
  suggest a solar interior magnetic structure quite different from any
  previously expected. These new results open the prospect of a new and
  powerful solar interior diagnostic based on acoustic holography.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Accurate Measurement of the Radius of Full-Disk Solar
    Intensity Images
Authors: Toner, C. G.; Jefferies, S. M.
1992AAS...180.1707T    Altcode: 1992BAAS...24..754T
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Scattering of p-Modes by a Sunspot
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Labonte, B. J.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Harvey, J. W.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1992AAS...180.0604B    Altcode: 1992BAAS...24..737B
  For the first time the scattering phase shifts of solar p-modes
  from a sunspot have been unambiguously determined. This is made
  possible by the recent availability of long duration, high duty
  cycle observations. The results presented here are determined from a
  Fourier-Hankel decomposition of p-mode amplitudes as measured from a
  68 hr subset of a larger set of observations made at the South Pole in
  1988. In addition to the detection of the phase shifts, the quality of
  the data allows the dependence of the p-mode scattering and absorption
  with azimuthal order, spatial wavenumber and temporal frequency to
  be independently determined. Thus, unlike previous observations, our
  measurements of absorption and phase shifts do not represent averages
  over a range of p-modes. With this information we have for the first
  time a complete description of the acoustic scattering amplitudes
  from a large sunspot. Interpretation of these observations requires a
  suitable theory of the interaction of p-modes and sunspots. However,
  with the complete scattering amplitudes now available one may apply
  inverse scattering algorithms, based on a few simplifying assumptions,
  to deduce a 3-dimensional map of the scattering strength of the active
  region. This offers the hope that general information about subsurface
  morphology of active regions might be gained even without a detailed
  understanding of the physical scattering processes involved. DCB is
  supported by Air Force URI grant AFOSR-90-0116. The South Pole program
  is supported in part by National Science Foundation grants DPP87-15791
  and 89-17626, and by the Solar Physics Branch of the Space Physics
  Division of NASA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from South Pole: Surprises from Near the
    Solar Surface
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.; Harvey,
   J. W.
1992AnJUS..27..322J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Characteristics of Intermediate-Degree Solar p-Mode Line Widths
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Harvey, J. W.; Osaki,
   Y.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1991ApJ...377..330J    Altcode:
  Measurements of the p-mode linewidths over the frequency range v =
  1.87-4.93 mHz and degree range 1 = 1-150 are presented. The linewidth
  is observed to vary with mode frequency and degree. The variation with
  frequency is consistent with the observations of Libbrecht although
  the measurements are systematically narrower. The frequency variation
  has been explained in terms of radiative and convective damping
  of the modes. The observed variation with degree resolves previous
  contradictory results and is shown to exceed the 1/S variation that is
  expected in theoretical grounds. Here S is the travel time of a mode
  from its lower turning point in the solar interior, to its reflection
  at the solar surface. The deviations from a 1/S variation suggest that
  there are two possible damping mechanisms, in addition to radiative
  and convective damping, that affect the modes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measurements of High-Frequency Solar Oscillation Modes
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Harvey, J. W.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1991ApJ...373..308D    Altcode:
  The spatial-temporal spectrum of solar oscillations exhibits modelike
  structure at frequencies above the nominal photospheric acoustic cutoff
  of about 5.3 mHz. The linewidth and frequency of these features are
  measured as functions of degree from high-quality spectra obtained from
  observations made at the geographic South Pole. From 5.3 to 6.5 mHz the
  linewidths are relatively constant with a value of about 70 microHz,
  approximately one-half the frequency difference between modes of the
  same degree but successive values of radial order number. This width
  is larger than can be accounted for by simple considerations of the
  leakage of trapped acoustic waves. The frequencies of the high-frequency
  modes adhere to a simple dispersion law if one uses a substantially
  larger effective phase shift that applies at lower frequencies. The
  frequency variation of this phase shift changes markedly above the
  acoustic cutoff frequency.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Simple Method for Correcting Spatially Resolved Solar
    Intensity Oscillation Observations for Variations in Scattered Light
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.
1991SoPh..132..215J    Altcode:
  A measurement of the intensity distribution in an image of the solar
  disk will be corrupted by a spatial redistribution of the light that
  is caused by the Earth's atmosphere and the observing instrument. If
  the precise form of the spatial point spread function is known and
  can be modeled, then the observed image can be corrected for its
  effects. However, accurate modeling of the spatial point spread
  function, which can be considered as composed of a `blurring'
  component and a `scattering' component (Zwaan, 1965), is difficult
  and the correction for its effects is computationally expensive.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Solar Equatorial Internal Rotation Rate Estimated from
    Combined South Pole and NSO/Sac Peak Helioseismic Data Sets
Authors: Hill, F.; Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.,
   Jr.; Harvey, J. W.
1991BAAS...23.1050H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Characteristics of Intermediate-Degree Solar p-mode Line Widths
Authors: Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.; Harvey, J. W.; Osaki,
   Y.; Pomerantz, M. A.
1991BAAS...23.1032D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from South Pole: 1990 High Resolution Campaign
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.; Harvey,
   J. W.
1991AnJUS..26..285J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling of Solar Oscillation Power Spectra
Authors: Anderson, Edwin R.; Duvall, Thomas L., Jr.; Jefferies,
   Stuart M.
1990ApJ...364..699A    Altcode:
  To produce accurate estimates of the line-profile parameters of a
  model used to represent the spectral features in a solar oscillation
  power spectrum, it is necessary to (1) select the appropriate
  probability density function when deriving the maximum-likelihood
  function to be employed for the parameter estimation and (2) allow
  for the redistribution of spectral power caused by gaps in the data
  string. This paper describes a maximum-likelihood method for estimating
  the model parameters (based on the observed power spectrum statistics)
  that accounts for redistribution of spectral power caused by gaps in
  the data string, by convolving the model with the power spectrum of the
  observed window function. The accuracy and reliability of the method
  were tested using both artificial and authentic solar oscillation power
  spectrum data. A comparison of this method with various least-squares
  techniques is also presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observed Characteristics of High-Frequency Solar Global
    Oscillations
Authors: Harvey, J. W.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1990BAAS...22..896H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What are the Observed High-Frequency Solar Acoustic Modes?
Authors: Kumar, P.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Harvey, J. W.; Jefferies,
   S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Thompson, M. J.
1990LNP...367...87K    Altcode: 1990psss.conf...87K
  Jefferies et al. (1988) observe discrete peaks up to 7mHz in the power
  spectra of their intermediate degree solar intensity oscillation data
  obtained at South Pole. This is perhaps surprising since waves with
  frequency greater than the acoustic cut-off frequency at the temperature
  minimum ( 5.5mHz), unlike their lower frequency counterparts, are not
  trapped in the solar interior. We propose that the observed peaks are
  associated with what are principally progressive waves emanating from
  a broad-band acoustic source. The geometrical effect of projecting
  observations of these progressive waves onto spherical harmonics
  then gives rise to peaks in the power spectra. The frequencies and
  amplitudes of the peaks will depend on the spatial characteristics of
  the source. Partial reflections in the solar atmosphere modify the power
  spectra, but in this picture they are not the primary reason for the
  appearance of the peaks. We estimate the frequency and power which would
  be expected from this model and compare it with the observations. We
  argue that these high frequency mock-modes are not overstable, and
  that they are excited by acoustic emission from turbulent convection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of p-Mode Absorption in Active Regions
Authors: Braun, D. C.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Jefferies, S. M.
1990LNP...367..181B    Altcode: 1990psss.conf..181B
  We present here a summary of results on the interaction of p-modes with
  solar active regions based on observations made at the Kitt Peak Solar
  Vacuum Telescope and the geographic South Pole. A travelling wave
  decomposition of p-modes is performed in a cylindrical coordinate
  system centered on the active regions. Significant absorption of
  p-mode wave power is observed to occur in all of the regions and
  is a function of horizontal wavenumber () - increasing linearly
  with k up to some maximum value and remaining constant for higher
  wavenumbers. The maximum fractional absorption of incident power
  is about 0.2 for small pores and 0.4 for typical isolated sunspots
  (radius = 15 Mm). A maximum of 70% absorption is seen in the large
  sunspot group of March 1989 (radius = 60 Mm). No convincing variation
  of the absorption with temporal frequency (i.e. radial order) is seen,
  although not entirely ruled out considering the relative errors involved
  with the power measurements. No significant difference in the amount
  of p-mode absorption is detected between equal 3-hour time intervals
  before and after a class X4 flare in the March 1989 region. No excess
  of outgoing waves following the time of the flare is detected. These
  observations do not support the suggestion that large flares may excite
  observable acoustic waves in the photosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from South Pole: Solar Cycle Connection
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.; Harvey,
   J. W.
1990AnJUS..25..271J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from the South Pole: Results from the 1987
    Campaign
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Harvey, J. W.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1990LNP...367..135J    Altcode: 1990psss.conf..135J
  This paper presents some results on the frequencies and line widths
  of features in solar p-mode spectra obtained from 460 hours of
  observations made at South Pole in 1987. To investigate the possibility
  of temporal variations in these quantities, a comparison is made with
  measurements obtained from data taken in 1981. The differences between
  the frequencies measured from the 1981 and 1987 data sets appear to be
  independent of both frequency (2.4 v 4.8 mHz) and degree (3 98). The
  mean difference (v 1981 - v 1987) averaged. over v and is found to be
  224 ± 19 nl1z. The line width measurements display the same variation
  with v as that previously reported (Libbrecht 1988a), an increase
  with ℓ (Duvall et ad. 1988) and with solar activity. Measurement of
  the rotational splittings of sectoral modes (m = ±ℓ) in the range
  (3 ≤ ℓ ≤ 15), shows no indication of a dependence on the depth
  of the lower turning points of these modes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Linewidths of low-degree acoustic modes of the sun
Authors: Elsworth, Y.; Isaak, G. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod, C. P.;
   New, R.
1990MNRAS.242..135E    Altcode:
  Estimates of the spectral linewidths of low degree (l = 0 and l = 1),
  5-min p-modes obtained from Doppler shift observations in 1984 (63 d)
  and 1986 (63 d) are reported. The observed linewidths increase from
  0.5 micro-Hz at 2000 micro-Hz to 3 micro-Hz at 3800 micro-Hz for l =
  0. Comparison with other data suggests that for a given frequency the
  linewidth increases with increasing values of l. On the assumption
  that the linewidth is substantially due to damping processes, the
  linewidths are consistent with e-folding times between 3.7 and 0.6 d.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Solar Tracking Platform for Use at the South Pole
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pfeiffer, R.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Schulman,
   L.; Ball, W.
1990AIPC..198..222J    Altcode: 1989AIPC..198..222J; 1990asan.conf..222J
  The design and performance of a solar tracking platform specifically
  built to capitalize on the outstanding observing conditions available
  at the geographic South Pole are described. Attention is given to a
  description of the apparatus and the principles of operation. Results
  reported were obtained using a CCD camera with 260 x 260 pixels to
  collect full disk solar images that were integrated over 75 sec before
  being recorded.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rotational Splitting of the Low-Degree Solar P-Modes
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.; Harvey, J. W.;
   Pomerantz, M. A.
1989BAAS...21..831J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The 160 Minute Solar Oscillation: an Artifact?
Authors: Elsworth, Y. P.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod, C. P.; New, R.;
   Palle, P. L.; van der Raay, H. B.; Regulo, C.; Roca Cortes, T.
1989ApJ...338..557E    Altcode:
  Analysis of data obtained over the years 1980-1985 are analyzed to show
  that the period of the 160-minute signal is indeed 160.00 minutes. It is
  demonstrated that this signal may be simulated by a slightly distorted
  diurnal sine wave such as that occasioned by differential atmospheric
  extinction.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from the South Pole: 1987 Results and 1988
    Campaign
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.; Harvey,
   J. W.
1989AnJUS..24..244J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from the South Pole: comparison of 1987 and
    1981 results.
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L., Jr.;
   Harvey, J. W.; Jaksha, D. B.
1988ESASP.286..279J    Altcode: 1988ssls.rept..279J
  Full disk images with ≡10 arc sec pixels and filtered to a ≡7 Å
  passband centered on the Ca II K line were obtained from the geographic
  South Pole in 1981 and 1987. In 1981, about 50 hours of essentially
  uninterrupted data were obtained. In 1987, three such runs were
  obtained over a period of 325 hours for a duty cycle of about 47%. The
  1987 observations are characterized by a much lower level of solar
  activity than 1981, a much improved CCD camera, considerably better
  image stability and a varying amount of instrumental scatter. The 1987
  data have a substantially better signal-to-noise ratio than the 1981
  data so that oscillations with degrees from 0 to 150 and frequencies
  from 2 to 7 mHz are well observed. The observations were reduced to
  spectra in l, m and ν. This paper presents a comparison of p-mode
  frequencies measured in 1981 and 1987 and coefficients of Legendre
  polynomial expansions of frequency shifts caused by solar rotation. The
  authors also study the time behavior of systematic frequency shifts
  which depend upon m but which do not arise from rotation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Linewidth of low degree acoustic modes of the Sun.
Authors: Elsworth, Y. P.; Isaak, G. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod,
   C. P.; New, R.; Palle, Pere L.; Regulo, C.; Roca Cortés, Teodoro
1988ESASP.286...27E    Altcode: 1988ssls.rept...27E
  Estimates of the spectral linewidths of low degree (l = 0 and l = 1),
  "5 minute" p-modes obtained from Doppler shift observations in 1984,
  1986 and 1987 are reported. The observed linewidths increase from 0.5
  μHz at 2000 μHz to 3.8 μHz at 4300 μHz for l = 0. Comparison with
  other data suggest that for a given frequency the linewidth increases
  with increasing l value. On the assumption that the linewidth is
  substantially due to damping processes the linewidths are consistent
  with e-folding times between 3.7 and 0.5 days.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Frequency stability of solar oscillations
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pallé, P. L.; van der Raay, H. B.; Régulo,
   C.; Roca Cortés, T.
1988Natur.333..646J    Altcode:
  Changes in the internal structure of the Sun over the 11-year
  magnetic activity cycle could be reflected in the eigenfrequencies
  of the acoustic p-modes. The first tentative experimental evidence
  was presented in 1984<SUP>1</SUP> and subsequently an analysis
  of ACRIM solar intensity data<SUP>2</SUP> suggested a decrease of
  frequencies of the 5-min solar p-modes between 1980 and 1984 of ~0.4
  μHz. Recently<SUP>3-6</SUP> further experimental data have provided
  conflicting results; frequency increases, decreases and stability have
  all been reported.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Splitting of the Low L Solar P-Modes
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod, C. P.; van der Raay, H. B.; Palle,
   P. L.; Roca-Cortes, T.
1988IAUS..123...25J    Altcode:
  An analysis of full disc line of sight velocity data yield line
  splitting values of the low l-value non-radial modes. Possible
  variations of the line splitting with the solar cycle are investigated.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Cycle Dependence of Solar P-Modes
Authors: Isaak, G. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod, C. P.; New, R.;
   van der Raay, H. B.; Palle, P. L.; Regulo, C.; Roca-Cortes, T.
1988IAUS..123..201I    Altcode:
  Data obtained at Izaña (Tenerife) and Haleakala (Maui), using optical
  resonant scattering with a potassium vapour cell over the years 1980 -
  84, are used to determine the frequencies of the low l p modes. Possible
  variation in these frequencies with the solar cycle are investigated.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Variations in the Mean Line-Of Velocity of the Sun - 1976-1985
Authors: Jimenez, A.; Palle, P. L.; Regulo, C.; Roca-Cortes, T.;
   Elsworth, Y. P.; Isaak, G. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod, C. P.; New,
   R.; van der Raay, H. B.
1988IAUS..123..215J    Altcode:
  Measurements of the line of sight velocity of the sun with respect to
  earth have been obtained at Izaña (Tenerife) during the years 1976 to
  1985. The mean values found for each year show a trend of ≡30 m/s from
  minimum to maximum. Their mean value is of 583.1±0.2 m/s which is 92%
  of the gravitational redshift predicted by theory and their variation
  seems to be related to the solar cycle with the clear exception of 1985.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Experience in Operating a Limited Global Network of Stations
    Measuring Full-Disc Oscillations of the Sun
Authors: Elsworth, Y. P.; Isaak, G. R.; Jefferies, S. M.; McLeod,
   C. P.; New, R.; van der Raay, H. B.; Palle, P. L.; Regulo, C.;
   Roca-Cortes, T.
1988IAUS..123..535E    Altcode:
  Details are given about the operation of a two station network and of
  a new semi-automatic station which has recently been added. Comparison
  is made with predicted duty cycles. A possible way of quantifying the
  sky quality is also given.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Helioseismology from the South Pole: 1987 Campaign
Authors: Jefferies, S. M.; Pomerantz, M. A.; Duvall, T. L.; Harvey,
   J. W.; Jaksha, D.
1988AnJUS..23..191J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS