2017
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aa5c84
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Sparse Reconstruction of Electric Fields from Radial Magnetic Data

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Cited by 10 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Kazachenko, Fisher, and Welsch (2014) argue that the error introduced by this is small and employ a central difference scheme also for the first order derivatives. However, we wish to reproduce ∂B z /∂t from Faraday's law exactly, and therefore employ the following consistent finite difference formulas for the spatial derivatives (used in a similar fashion also by Yeates, 2017):…”
Section: B Numerical Implementation Of the Electric Field Inversion mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kazachenko, Fisher, and Welsch (2014) argue that the error introduced by this is small and employ a central difference scheme also for the first order derivatives. However, we wish to reproduce ∂B z /∂t from Faraday's law exactly, and therefore employ the following consistent finite difference formulas for the spatial derivatives (used in a similar fashion also by Yeates, 2017):…”
Section: B Numerical Implementation Of the Electric Field Inversion mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whichever polarity is the minority polarity then has the flux in each of its constituent pixels enhanced by a constant relative factor such that the total net radial flux is zero. This is similar to a technique proposed by Yeates (2017), except that in the latter case, both polarity regions are adjusted.…”
Section: Global Ptd (Nudging) Solutions For Ementioning
confidence: 90%
“…Weinzierl et al (2016a,b) presented solutions for the horizontal components of the electric field that combined a solution for the "inductive" contributions to the horizontal electric field components, determined from the time derivative of the radial magnetic field, with a non-inductive contribution that was determined from surface flux transport models. Yeates (2017) derived electric field solutions that combine solutions for the same inductive contribution as those above, but with the non-inductive contribution to the electric field determined from a "sparseness" constraint, to minimize unphysical artifacts of the horizontal electric field from the purely inductive solution. Lumme et al (2017); Price et al (2019) used solutions for all three components of the electric field using time derivatives for all three components of B, as described for the "PTD" solutions in KFW14, using a centered grid formalism.…”
Section: Review Of the Pdfi Electric Field Inversion Equationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, the obtained E h does not strictly reproduce that expected from Ohm's law when considering the true physical system of a plasma velocity acting on a magnetic field. To counter this problem and include the missing inductive component when using only normal-component magnetograms, Yeates (2017) put forward a new method for deriving the horizontal electric field. The aim of this technique was to include a non-inductive component and minimise the number of locations where E h is non-zero, thus producing a "sparser" solution compared to standard Poisson-solver techniques.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This formulation was then solved using a least-squares technique using a basis pursuit algorithm that minimises the L 1 -norm. Yeates (2017) successfully tested this technique through a series of 2D idealised and data-based simulations of the normal magnetic field component in the photosphere, however, no 3D simulations of the corona were considered. Thus, the consequence of applying a sparse electric field determined through the L 1 -norm, in a 3D coronal magnetic field simulation is unclear.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%