Solar ALMA observations: constraining the chromosphere above sunspots
Maria Loukitcheva, Kazumasa Iwai, Sami K. Solanki, Stephen M. White,, Masumi Shimojo

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution ALMA observations of sunspots at 1.3 mm and 3 mm, revealing detailed chromospheric brightness structures and testing sunspot models against these new data.
Contribution
First high-resolution millimeter observations of sunspots at multiple wavelengths, providing new constraints for sunspot atmospheric models.
Findings
Umbral brightness differs significantly between 1.3 mm and 3 mm wavelengths.
The Severino et al. (1994) model best fits the observed data.
Penumbral brightness is similar at both wavelengths and increases towards the boundary.
Abstract
We present the first high-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of a sunspot at wavelengths of 1.3 mm and 3 mm, obtained during the solar ALMA Science Verification campaign in 2015, and compare them with the predictions of semi-empirical sunspot umbral/penumbral atmosphere models. For the first time millimeter observations of sunspots have resolved umbral/penumbral brightness structure at the chromospheric heights, where the emission at these wavelengths is formed. We find that the sunspot umbra exhibits a radically different appearance at 1.3 mm and 3 mm, whereas the penumbral brightness structure is similar at the two wavelengths. The inner part of the umbra is ~600 K brighter than the surrounding quiet Sun (QS) at 3 mm and is ~700 K cooler than the QS at 1.3 mm, being the coolest part of sunspot at this wavelength. On average, the brightness of…
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