Transition-Region/Coronal Signatures and Magnetic Setting of Sunspot Penumbral Jets: {\it Hinode} (SOT/FG), Hi-C and {\it SDO}/AIA Observations
Sanjiv K. Tiwari, Ronald L. Moore, Amy R. Winebarger, Shane E. Alpert

TL;DR
This study investigates penumbral microjets in sunspots using multi-instrument observations, finding that most do not significantly contribute to coronal heating, but larger tail jets show signatures in the transition region and may influence coronal dynamics indirectly.
Contribution
It provides a revised understanding of penumbral jet formation and their signatures in the transition region and corona based on high-resolution multi-wavelength observations.
Findings
Most PJs lack signatures in AIA passbands.
Large tail PJs show transition region signatures.
PJs likely do not directly heat the corona significantly.
Abstract
Penumbral microjets (PJs) are transient narrow bright features in the chromosphere of sunspot penumbrae, first characterized by Katsukawa et al (2007) using the \CaII\ H-line filter on {\it Hinode}'s Solar Optical Telescope (SOT). It was proposed that the PJs form as a result of reconnection between two magnetic components of penumbra (spines and interspines), and that they could contribute to the transition region (TR) and coronal heating above sunspot penumbrae. We propose a modified picture of formation of PJs based on recent results on internal structure of sunspot penumbral filaments. Using data of a sunspot from {\it Hinode}/SOT, High Resolution Coronal Imager, and different passbands of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) onboard the {\it Solar Dynamics Observatory}, we examine whether PJs have signatures in the TR and corona. We find hardly any discernible signature of normal…
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