An active region filament studied simultaneously in the chromosphere and photosphere. II. Doppler velocities
C. Kuckein (1,2), V. Martinez Pillet (1), R. Centeno (3) ((1), Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, La Laguna, Spain, (2) Departamento de, Astrofisica, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain, (3) High Altitude, Observatory (NCAR), Boulder, CO, USA)

TL;DR
This study investigates Doppler velocities in an active region filament across chromosphere and photosphere, revealing complex flow patterns including upflows in the filament and surrounding downflows, indicating flux rope emergence.
Contribution
It provides detailed velocity measurements using multiple inversion methods, offering new insights into the flow dynamics and magnetic structure of active region filaments.
Findings
Chromospheric downflows in faculae average 1.6 km/s.
Filament shows photospheric upflows with average -0.15 km/s.
Filament flux rope is emerging at multiple locations.
Abstract
Paper I presents the magnetic structure of a filament that developed in active region (AR) NOAA 10781. In this paper we complement those results with the velocities retrieved from Doppler shifts measured at the chromosphere and the photosphere in the AR filament area. Various inversion methods with different numbers of atmospheric components and different weighting schemes of the Stokes profiles were used. The velocities were calibrated on an absolute scale. A ubiquitous chromospheric downflow is found in the faculae surrounding the filament, with an average velocity of 1.6 km/s. The filament region, however, displays upflows in the photosphere on both days, when the linear polarization (which samples the transverse component of the fields) is given more weight in the inversions. The upflow speeds of the transverse fields in the filament region average -0.15 km/s. In the chromosphere,…
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