Upper Chromospheric Magnetic Field of a Sunspot Penumbra: Observations of Fine Structure
J. Joshi, A. Lagg, S. K. Solanki, A. Feller, M. Collados, D. Orozco, Su\'arez, R. Schlichenmaier, M. Franz, H. Balthasar, C. Denker, T. Berkefeld,, A. Hofmann, C. Kiess, H. Nicklas, A. Pastor Yabar, R. Rezaei, D. Schmidt, W., Schmidt, M. Sobotka, D. Soltau, J. Staude

TL;DR
This study investigates the fine structure of the magnetic field in a sunspot penumbra's upper chromosphere using high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations, revealing that magnetic inclination variations persist from photosphere to chromosphere.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of magnetic field structures in the photosphere and upper chromosphere of a sunspot penumbra at high spatial resolution.
Findings
Magnetic inclination varies azimuthally in both layers.
Chromospheric inclination variations match photospheric spine/inter-spine patterns.
Small-scale magnetic inclination fluctuations persist into the chromosphere.
Abstract
The fine-structure of magnetic field of a sunspot penumbra in the upper chromosphere is to be explored and compared to that in the photosphere. High spatial resolution spectropolarimetric observations were recorded with the 1.5-meter GREGOR telescope using the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS). The observed spectral domain includes the upper chromospheric He I triplet at 1083.0 nm and the photospheric Si I 1082.7 nm and Ca I 1083.3 nm spectral lines. The upper chromospheric magnetic field is obtained by inverting the He I triplet assuming a Milne-Eddington type model atmosphere. A height dependent inversion was applied to the Si I 1082.7 nm and Ca I 1083.3 nm lines to obtain the photospheric magnetic field. We find that the inclination of the magnetic field shows variations in the azimuthal direction both in the photosphere, but also in the upper chromosphere. The chromospheric…
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