Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ishikawa, Ryohko, Bueno, Javier Trujillo, McKenzie, David E., Song, Donguk, Alemán, Tanausú del Pino, Ballester, Ernest Alsina, Belluzzi, Luca, Li, Hao, Auchère, Frédéric, Bethge, Christian, De Pontieu, Bart, Kano, Ryouhei, Kobayashi, Ken, Kobelski, Adam R., Okamoto, Takenori J., Rachmeler, Laurel A., Sakao, Taro, Štěpán, Jiří, Vigil, Genevieve D., Winebarger, Amy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.09878
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866912480983252992
author Ishikawa, Ryohko
Bueno, Javier Trujillo
McKenzie, David E.
Song, Donguk
Alemán, Tanausú del Pino
Ballester, Ernest Alsina
Belluzzi, Luca
Li, Hao
Auchère, Frédéric
Bethge, Christian
De Pontieu, Bart
Kano, Ryouhei
Kobayashi, Ken
Kobelski, Adam R.
Okamoto, Takenori J.
Rachmeler, Laurel A.
Sakao, Taro
Štěpán, Jiří
Vigil, Genevieve D.
Winebarger, Amy
author_facet Ishikawa, Ryohko
Bueno, Javier Trujillo
McKenzie, David E.
Song, Donguk
Alemán, Tanausú del Pino
Ballester, Ernest Alsina
Belluzzi, Luca
Li, Hao
Auchère, Frédéric
Bethge, Christian
De Pontieu, Bart
Kano, Ryouhei
Kobayashi, Ken
Kobelski, Adam R.
Okamoto, Takenori J.
Rachmeler, Laurel A.
Sakao, Taro
Štěpán, Jiří
Vigil, Genevieve D.
Winebarger, Amy
contents We determine magnetic fields from the photosphere to the upper chromosphere combining data from the Hinode satellite and the CLASP2.1 sounding rocket experiment. CLASP2.1 provided polarization profiles of the Mg~{|sc ii} $h$ and $k$ lines, as well as of the Mn~{|sc i} lines around 2800~{|AA}, across various magnetic structures in an active region, containing a plage, a pore, and the edges of a sunspot penumbra. By applying the Weak-Field Approximation (WFA) to the circular polarization profiles of these spectral lines, we obtain a longitudinal magnetic field map at three different heights in the chromosphere (lower, middle, and upper). This is complemented by data from Hinode (photospheric magnetic field), IRIS, and SDO (high-spatial-resolution observations of the chromosphere and corona). We quantify the height expansion of the plage magnetic fields and find that the magnetic fields expand significantly in the middle chromosphere, shaping the moss observed above in the transition region and corona. We identified an area with polarity reversal at the upper chromosphere around the edge of the pore, suggesting the presence of a magnetic discontinuity in the upper chromosphere. Transient and recurrent jet-like events are observed in this region, likely driven by magnetic reconnection. Around the penumbral edge, we find large-scale magnetic fields corresponding to the superpenumbral fibrils seen in the upper chromosphere. In the superpenumbral fibrils, we find Zeeman-induced linear polarization signals, suggesting the presence of a significantly inclined magnetic field, as strong as 1000~G in the upper chromosphere.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_09878
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Determining the Magnetic Field in the Atmosphere of a Solar Active Region Observed by the CLASP2.1 Sounding Rocket Experiment
Ishikawa, Ryohko
Bueno, Javier Trujillo
McKenzie, David E.
Song, Donguk
Alemán, Tanausú del Pino
Ballester, Ernest Alsina
Belluzzi, Luca
Li, Hao
Auchère, Frédéric
Bethge, Christian
De Pontieu, Bart
Kano, Ryouhei
Kobayashi, Ken
Kobelski, Adam R.
Okamoto, Takenori J.
Rachmeler, Laurel A.
Sakao, Taro
Štěpán, Jiří
Vigil, Genevieve D.
Winebarger, Amy
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
We determine magnetic fields from the photosphere to the upper chromosphere combining data from the Hinode satellite and the CLASP2.1 sounding rocket experiment. CLASP2.1 provided polarization profiles of the Mg~{|sc ii} $h$ and $k$ lines, as well as of the Mn~{|sc i} lines around 2800~{|AA}, across various magnetic structures in an active region, containing a plage, a pore, and the edges of a sunspot penumbra. By applying the Weak-Field Approximation (WFA) to the circular polarization profiles of these spectral lines, we obtain a longitudinal magnetic field map at three different heights in the chromosphere (lower, middle, and upper). This is complemented by data from Hinode (photospheric magnetic field), IRIS, and SDO (high-spatial-resolution observations of the chromosphere and corona). We quantify the height expansion of the plage magnetic fields and find that the magnetic fields expand significantly in the middle chromosphere, shaping the moss observed above in the transition region and corona. We identified an area with polarity reversal at the upper chromosphere around the edge of the pore, suggesting the presence of a magnetic discontinuity in the upper chromosphere. Transient and recurrent jet-like events are observed in this region, likely driven by magnetic reconnection. Around the penumbral edge, we find large-scale magnetic fields corresponding to the superpenumbral fibrils seen in the upper chromosphere. In the superpenumbral fibrils, we find Zeeman-induced linear polarization signals, suggesting the presence of a significantly inclined magnetic field, as strong as 1000~G in the upper chromosphere.
title Determining the Magnetic Field in the Atmosphere of a Solar Active Region Observed by the CLASP2.1 Sounding Rocket Experiment
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.09878