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Explanation of the sea-serpent magnetic structure of sunspot penumbrae

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 Added by Irina Kitiashvili
 Publication date 2010
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Recent spectro-polarimetric observations of a sunspot showed the formation of bipolar magnetic patches in the mid penumbra and their propagation toward the outer penumbral boundary. The observations were interpreted as being caused by sea-serpent magnetic fields near the solar surface (Sainz Dalda & Bellot Rubio 2008). In this Letter, we develop a 3D radiative MHD numerical model to explain the sea-serpent structure and the wave-like behavior of the penumbral magnetic field lines. The simulations reproduce the observed behavior, suggesting that the sea-serpent phenomenon is a consequence of magnetoconvection in a strongly inclined magnetic field. It involves several physical processes: filamentary structurization, high-speed overturning convective motions in strong, almost horizontal magnetic fields with partially frozen field lines, and traveling convective waves. The results demonstrate a correlation of the bipolar magnetic patches with high-speed Evershed downflows in the penumbra. This is the first time that a 3D numerical model of the penumbra results in downward directed magnetic fields, an essential ingredient of sunspot penumbrae that has eluded explanation until now.



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Recently, there have been some reports of unusually strong photospheric magnetic fields (which can reach values of over 7 kG) inferred from Hinode SOT/SP sunspot observations within penumbral regions. These superstrong penumbral fields are even larger than the strongest umbral fields on record and appear to be associated with supersonic downflows. The finding of such fields has been controversial since they seem to show up only when spatially coupled
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64 - Sanjiv K. Tiwari 2017
Sunspots contain multiple small-scale structures in the umbra and in the penumbra. Despite extensive research on this subject in pre-Hinode era multiple questions concerning fine-scale structures of sunspots, their formation, evolution and decay remained open. Several of those questions were proposed to be pursued by Hinode (SOT). Here we review some of the achievements on understanding sunspot structure by Hinode in its first 10 years of successful operation. After giving a brief summary and updates on the most recent understanding of sunspot structures, and describing contributions of Hinode to that, we also discuss future directions. This is a section (#7.1) of a long review article on the achievements of Hinode in the first 10 years.
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