On the Doppler Shift and Asymmetry of Stokes Profiles of Photospheric FeI and Chromospheric MgI Lines
Na Deng, Debi Prasad Choudhary, K. S. Balasubramaniam

TL;DR
This study compares Stokes profiles of photospheric and chromospheric lines in a sunspot to understand magnetic and flow structures, revealing differences in Doppler shifts and asymmetries across layers.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the formation heights and flow characteristics of chromospheric and photospheric lines in sunspots using simultaneous spectro-polarimetric measurements.
Findings
Penumbral Evershed flows are magnetized and mainly horizontal.
Inverse Evershed effect suggests formation near temperature minimum.
Stokes V asymmetries vary between photosphere and chromosphere.
Abstract
We analyzed the full Stokes spectra using simultaneous measurements of the photospheric (FeI 630.15 and 630.25 nm) and chromospheric (MgI b2 517.27 nm) lines. The data were obtained with the HAO/NSO Advanced Stokes Polarimeter, about a near disc center sunspot region, NOAA AR 9661. We compare the characteristics of Stokes profiles in terms of Doppler shifts and asymmetries among the three spectral lines, which helps us to better understand the chromospheric lines and the magnetic and flow fields in different magnetic regions. The main results are: (1) For penumbral area observed by the photospheric FeI lines, Doppler velocities derived from Stokes I (Vi) are very close to those derived from linear polarization profiles (Vlp) but significantly different from those derived from Stokes V profiles (Vzc), which provides direct and strong evidence that the penumbral Evershed flows are…
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