A closer look at a coronal loop rooted in a sunspot umbra
L. P. Chitta, H. Peter, and P. R. Young

TL;DR
This study reports a rare observation of a coronal loop rooted in a sunspot umbra without light bridges or umbral dots, revealing persistent supersonic downflows and shock transitions, challenging typical magnetic energy assumptions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a coronal loop rooted directly in a sunspot umbra without typical magnetic features, using multi-instrument spectroscopic data.
Findings
Detected persistent strong redshifted downflows exceeding 100 km/s.
Identified shock transition with smaller downflow speeds near the footpoint.
Observed no direct evidence of energy input at the loop's footpoint.
Abstract
Extreme UV (EUV) and X-ray loops in the solar corona connect regions of enhanced magnetic activity, but they are not usually rooted in the dark umbrae of sunspots because the strong magnetic field found there suppresses convection. This means that the Poynting flux of magnetic energy into the upper atmosphere is not significant within the umbra as long as there are no light bridges or umbral dots. Here we report a rare observation of a coronal loop rooted in the dark umbra of a sunspot without any traces of light bridges or umbral dots. We used the slit-jaw images and spectroscopic data from IRIS and concentrate on the line profiles of O IV and Si IV that show persistent strong redshifted components in the loop rooted in the umbra. Using the ratios of O IV, we can estimate the density and thus investigate the mass flux. The coronal context and temperature diagnostics of these…
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