The multi-thermal chromosphere: inversions of ALMA and IRIS data
J. M. da Silva Santos, J. de la Cruz Rodr\'iguez, J. Leenaarts, G., Chintzoglou, B. De Pontieu, S. Wedemeyer, M. Szydlarski

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that combining ALMA millimeter observations with IRIS ultraviolet spectra significantly improves the inversion of the solar chromosphere's thermal and microturbulent structure, revealing diverse temperature features and dynamic phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multi-diagnostic inversion approach using ALMA and IRIS data to better constrain chromospheric temperature and turbulence, highlighting the importance of millimeter data.
Findings
ALMA data enhances inversion contrast and temperature range.
Detection of cool (~3000 K) and hot (~11,000 K) features in the chromosphere.
Evidence for localized low-temperature regions and shock-induced high temperatures.
Abstract
Numerical simulations of the solar chromosphere predict a diverse thermal structure with both hot and cool regions. Observations of plage regions in particular feature broader and brighter chromospheric lines, which suggest that they are formed in hotter and denser conditions than in the quiet-Sun, but also implies a non-thermal component whose source is unclear. We revisit the problem of the stratification of temperature and microturbulence in plage now adding millimeter continuum observations provided by ALMA to inversions of near-ultraviolet IRIS spectra as a powerful new diagnostic to disentangle the two parameters. We fit cool chromospheric holes and track the fast evolution of compact mm brightenings in the plage region. We use the STiC non-LTE inversion code to simultaneously fit real ultraviolet and millimeter spectra in order to infer the thermodynamic parameters of the plasma.…
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