Wilcox Solar Observatory Explained
The Wilcox Solar Observatory (WSO) is a solar observatory in Stanford, California that is used to produce daily observations of the magnetic and velocity field at the Sun's surface.[1] It began daily observations of the Sun's mean magnetic field in May 1975. Formerly known as the Stanford Solar Observatory, it is operated by Stanford University and is located 2km (01miles) south of the Stanford University campus. It would later be named after solar physicist John M. Wilcox. WSO has historically been funded by NASA Heliophysics, the National Science Foundation, and the Office of Naval Research.[2] [3] [4] [5]
WSO uses a Littrow spectrograph together with a Babcock magnetograph on the5250 Å iron-1 spectral line, which it compares to the close by and magnetically insensitive iron-1 line at 5124 Å, to estimate the line-of-sight photospheric magnetic field to within 0.04 gauss.[6]
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: WSO - The Wilcox Solar Observatory . wso.stanford.edu . 18 December 2022.
- Web site: Wilcox Solar Observatory - John M. Wilcox . wso.stanford.edu . 18 December 2022.
- Hoeksema . J. Todd . Scherrer . Philip H. . An atlas of photospheric magnetic field observations and computed coronal magnetic fields: 1976–1985 . Solar Physics . May 1986 . 105 . 1 . 205–211 . 10.1007/BF00156388 . 1986SoPh..105..205H . 120235347 .
- https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2001JA009195 Solar mean magnetic field variability: A wavelet approach to Wilcox Solar Observatory and SOHO/Michelson Doppler Imager observations
- https://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu//full/1986BAAS...18..621./0000622.000.html 1986BAAS...18..621. Observatory Reports: Wilcox Solar Observatory (Stanford Univ.)
- https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/metadata/landing-page/bin/iso?id=gov.noaa.ngdc.stp.solar_imagery:Chromosphere_Magnetogram_Wilcox Magnetogram Chromosphere Observed from Wilcox Observatory