Brightness, distribution, and evolution of sunspot umbral dots
T. L. Riethmueller, S. K. Solanki, V. Zakharov, A. Gandorfer

TL;DR
This study analyzes thousands of sunspot umbral dots using high-resolution TiO imaging, revealing their sizes, brightness, motion, and evolution, and providing new insights into their lifetimes, dynamics, and origins.
Contribution
It introduces a multilevel tracking algorithm to reliably identify and analyze thousands of umbral dots, and details their statistical properties and evolution in a mature sunspot.
Findings
Most UDs are spatially resolved with a peak diameter of 225 km.
Three quarters of UDs have lifetimes less than 150 seconds.
Bright and mobile UDs tend to originate near the umbra-penumbra boundary.
Abstract
We present a 106-minute TiO (705.7nm) time series of high spatial and temporal resolution that contains thousands of umbral dots (UDs) in a mature sunspot in the active region NOAA 10667 at =0.95. The data were acquired with the 1-m Swedish Solar Telescope on La Palma. With the help of a multilevel tracking (MLT) algorithm the sizes, brightnesses, and trajectories of 12836 umbral dots were found and analyzed. The MLT allows UDs with very low contrast to be reliably identified. Inside the umbra we determine a UD filling factor of 11%. The histogram of UD lifetimes is monotonic, i.e. a UD does not have a typical lifetime. Three quarters of the UDs lived for less than 150s and showed no or little motion. The histogram of the UD diameters exhibits a maximum at 225km, i.e. most of the UDs are spatially resolved. UDs display a typical horizontal velocity of 420m/s and a typical peak…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
