An overall view of temperature oscillations in the solar chromosphere with ALMA
Shahin Jafarzadeh, Sven Wedemeyer, Bernhard Fleck, Marco Stangalini,, David B. Jess, Richard J. Morton, Mikolaj Szydlarski, Vasco M. J. Henriques,, Xiaoshuai Zhu, Thomas Wiegelmann, Juan C. Guevara G\'omez, Samuel D. T., Grant, Bin Chen, Kevin Reardon, and Stephen M. White

TL;DR
This paper analyzes high-resolution ALMA observations of the solar chromosphere, revealing how magnetic regions influence temperature oscillation frequencies and discussing the implications for understanding chromospheric dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of temperature oscillations in the solar chromosphere using ALMA data, highlighting the impact of magnetic topology on oscillation frequencies.
Findings
Magnetic flux influences dominant oscillation frequencies.
Enhanced power in 3-5 mHz range in quiescent regions.
Lower frequencies dominate in magnetically active areas.
Abstract
By direct measurements of the gas temperature, the Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) has yielded a new diagnostic tool to study the solar chromosphere. Here we present an overview of the brightness-temperature fluctuations from several high-quality and high-temporal-resolution (i.e., 1 and 2 sec cadence) time series of images obtained during the first two years of solar observations with ALMA, in Band 3 and Band 6, centred at around 3 mm (100 GHz) and 1.25 mm (239 GHz), respectively. The various datasets represent solar regions with different levels of magnetic flux. We perform Fast Fourier and Lomb-Scargle transforms to measure both the spatial structuring of dominant frequencies and the average global frequency distributions of the oscillations (i.e., averaged over the entire field of view). We find that the observed frequencies significantly vary from one dataset…
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