A solar photospheric "thermal profiling" analysis is presented, exploiting the infrared (2.3-4.6 ?m) rovibrational bands of carbon monoxide (CO) as observed with the McMath-Pierce Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS) at Kitt Peak, and from above the Earth's atmosphere by the Shuttle-borne ATMOS experiment. Visible continuum intensities and center-limb behavior constrained the temperature profile of the deep photosphere, while CO center-limb behavior defined the thermal structure at higher altitudes. The oxygen abundance was self-consistently determined from weak CO absorptions (for C/O ? 0.5). Our analysis was meant to complement recent studies based on three-dimensional (3D) convection models, which, among other things, have revised the historical solar oxygen (and carbon) abundance downward by a factor of nearly 2, although in fact our conclusions do not support such a revision. Based on various considerations, an ##IMG## [http://ej.iop.org/icons/Entities/epsi.gif] {epsilon} O = 700 ? 100 ppm (parts per million relative to hydrogen) is recommended; the large uncertainty reflects the model sensitivity of CO. New solar isotopic ratios also are reported: 12 C/ 13 C = 80 ? 1, 16 O/ 17 O = 1700 ? 220, and 16 O/ 18 O = 440 ? 6?all significantly lower than terrestrial. CO synthesis experiments utilizing a stripped down version of the 3D model?which has large temperature fluctuations in the middle photosphere, possibly inconsistent with CO "movies" from the Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (IRIS), and a steeper mean temperature gradient than matches visible continuum center-limb measurements?point to a lower oxygen abundance (~500 ppm) and isotopic ratios closer to terrestrial. A low oxygen abundance from CO?and other molecules like OH?thus hinges on the reality of the theoretically predicted midphotospheric convective properties.
CITATION STYLE
Ayres, T. R., Plymate, C., & Keller, C. U. (2006). Solar Carbon Monoxide, Thermal Profiling, and the Abundances of C, O, and Their Isotopes. The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 165(2), 618–651. https://doi.org/10.1086/504847
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