CLASP Constraints on the Magnetization and Geometrical Complexity of the Chromosphere-Corona Transition Region
J. Trujillo Bueno, J. \v{S}t\v{e}p\'an, L. Belluzzi, A. Asensio Ramos,, R. Manso Sainz, T. del Pino Alem\'an, R. Casini, R. Ishikawa, R. Kano, A., Winebarger, F. Auch\`ere, N. Narukage, K. Kobayashi, T. Bando, Y. Katsukawa,, M. Kubo, S. Ishikawa, G. Giono, H. Hara, Y. Suematsu

TL;DR
This paper uses CLASP spectropolarimetric data and advanced modeling to constrain the magnetic field strength and geometrical complexity of the solar chromosphere-corona transition region, revealing a highly corrugated and weakly magnetized TR.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical 3D modeling approach combined with radiative transfer calculations to interpret polarization signals and infer TR properties from CLASP observations.
Findings
The TR exhibits high geometrical corrugation.
The best-fit model indicates weak magnetic fields in the TR.
CLASP data constrains the TR's magnetization and structure.
Abstract
The Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro-Polarimeter (CLASP) is a suborbital rocket experiment that on 3rd September 2015 measured the linear polarization produced by scattering processes in the hydrogen Ly- line of the solar disk radiation, whose line-center photons stem from the chromosphere-corona transition region (TR). These unprecedented spectropolarimetric observations revealed an interesting surprise, namely that there is practically no center-to-limb variation (CLV) in the line-center signals. Using an analytical model, we first show that the geometrical complexity of the corrugated surface that delineates the TR has a crucial impact on the CLV of the and line-center signals. Secondly, we introduce a statistical description of the solar atmosphere based on a three-dimensional (3D) model derived from a state-of-the-art radiation magneto-hydrodynamic…
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