Absorption of high frequency oscillations and its relation to emissivity reduction
Matthias Waidele, Markus Roth, Gangadharan Vigeesh, and Kolja, Glogowski

TL;DR
This study identifies a new high-frequency wave absorption feature in sunspots, likely caused by reduced emissivity, providing insights into magnetic effects on solar wave dynamics and subsurface structures.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery of a previously unobserved high-frequency absorption feature in sunspots and links it to emissivity reduction, advancing understanding of wave-magnetic field interactions.
Findings
High-frequency absorption feature confined to sunspot regions.
Absorption strength peaks between 0.166 and 0.222.
Relation between emissivity reduction and wave absorption established.
Abstract
Sunspots are known to be strong absorbers of solar oscillation modal power. The most convincing way to demonstrate this is done via Fourier-Hankel decomposition (FHD), where the local oscillation field is separated into in- and outgoing waves, showing the reduction in power. Due to the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager's high-cadence Doppler measurements, power absorption can be investigated at frequencies beyond the acoustic cutoff frequency. We perform an FHD on five sunspot regions and two quiet-Sun control regions and study the resulting absorption spectra , specifically at frequencies > 5.3 mHz. We observe an unreported high-frequency absorption feature, which only appears in the presence of a sunspot. This feature is confined to phase speeds of one-skip waves whose origins coincide with the sunspot's center, with = 85.7 km/s in this case. By…
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