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Three-dimensional magnetic structure of a sunspot : Comparison of the photosphere and upper chromosphere

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TLDR
In this article, the magnetic field of a sunspot in the upper chromosphere was investigated and compared with the photospheric properties of the field in the Tenerife Infrared Polarimeter-2 (TIP-2).
Abstract
Aims. We investigate the magnetic field of a sunspot in the upper chromosphere and compare it to the photospheric properties of the field. Methods. We observed the main leading sunspot of the active region NOAA 11124 during two days with the Tenerife Infrared Polarimeter-2 (TIP-2) mounted at the German Vacuum Tower Telescope (VTT). Through inversion of Stokes spectra of the He i  triplet at 10 830 A, we obtained the magnetic field vector of the upper chromosphere. For comparison with the photosphere, we applied height-dependent inversions of the Si i 10 827.1 A  and Ca i 10 833.4 A lines. Results. We found that the umbral magnetic field strength in the upper chromosphere is lower by a factor of 1.30–1.65 compared to the photosphere. The magnetic field strength of the umbra decreases from the photosphere toward the upper chromosphere by an average rate of 0.5–0.9 G km -1 . The difference in the magnetic field strength between both atmospheric layers steadily decreases from the sunspot center to the outer boundary of the sunspot; the field, in particular its horizontal component, is stronger in the chromopshere outside the spot and this is suggestive of a magnetic canopy. The sunspot displays a twist that on average is similar in the two layers. However, the differential twist between the photosphere and chromosphere increases rapidly toward the outer penumbral boundary. The magnetic field vector is more horizontal with respect to the solar surface by roughly 5–20° in the photosphere compared to the upper chromosphere. Above a lightbridge, the chromospheric magnetic field is equally strong as that in the umbra, whereas the field of the lightbridge is weaker than its surroundings in the photosphere by roughly 1 kG. This suggests a cusp-like magnetic field structure above the lightbridge.

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Evidence of magnetic field wrapping around penumbral filaments

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Magnetic field variations associated with umbral flashes and penumbral waves

TL;DR: Umbral flashes and running penumbral waves (RPWs) in sunspot chromospheres leave a dramatic imprint in the intensity profile of the Can 8542 angstrom line as discussed by the authors.
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Magnetic field variations associated with umbral flashes and penumbral waves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the origin of periodic variations of the magnetic field strength by analyzing a time-series of high temporal cadence observations acquired in the Ca II line with the CRISP instrument at the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope.
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Height Dependence of the Penumbral Fine-scale Structure in the Inner Solar Atmosphere

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the physical parameters of the penumbra in a large and fully developed sunspot, one of the largest over the last two solar cycles, by using full-Stokes measurements taken at the photospheric Fe I 617.3 nm and chromospheric Ca II 854.2 nm lines with the Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer.
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Magnetic Properties and Flow Angle of the Inverse Evershed Flow at Its Downflow Points

TL;DR: In this article, the authors determined the direction and strength of the photospheric and lower chromospheric magnetic field in the umbra and penumbra of a sunspot from inversions of spectropolarimetric observations of photosphere lines at 617,nm and 1565,nm, respectively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatially coupled inversion of spectro-polarimetric image data - I. Method and first results

TL;DR: In this article, a data reduction method that takes the image degradation effects that are present in the data into account and minimizes the resulting errors is developed, while simultaneously requiring fewer free parameters than conventional approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical properties of a sunspot chromosphere with umbral flashes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented new high-resolution spectro-polarimetric Ca II lambda 8542 observations of umbral flashes in sunspots, spanning about one hour of continuous observation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Tomography of a Sunspot. II. Vector Magnetic Field and Temperature Stratification

TL;DR: In this article, the Stokes Inversion based on Response Functions (SIR inversion) was applied to a low-noise, full Stokes profile two-dimensional map of the sunspot as observed with the Advanced Stokes Polarimeter.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Relation between Umbral Dots, Dark-cored Filaments, and Light Bridges

TL;DR: In this paper, a time sequence of reconstructed G-band images and adaptive optics-corrected UBF filtergrams was analyzed with the goal of comparing observations with recent simulations and models of sunspot fine structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Latitude Variation of Helicity in Solar Active Regions

TL;DR: In this article, the current helicity of 230 active regions on the Sun during the period of 1992-2001 was studied using vector magnetograms used with the Solar Flare Telescope, located at the Mitaka campus of the National Astronomical Observatory.
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