Magnetized supersonic downflows in the chromosphere. A statistical study using the He I 10830 \r{A} lines
K. Sowmya, A. Lagg, S. K. Solanki, J. S. Castellanos Dur\'an

TL;DR
This study statistically analyzes magnetized supersonic downflows in the Sun's chromosphere above active regions, revealing their widespread occurrence, association with various features, and dominant draining mechanism along rising magnetic loops.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive statistical survey of these downflows using He I 10830 Å spectro-polarimetric data, highlighting their prevalence and characteristics.
Findings
Supersonic downflows are common in all active regions studied.
Downflows cover 0.2-6.4% of the observed area.
Most downflows are associated with plasma draining along rising magnetic loops.
Abstract
The chromosphere above active regions (ARs) on the Sun hosts magnetized supersonic downflows. Studies of these supersonic downflows help to decipher the magnetic fine structure and dynamics of the chromosphere. We perform a statistical analysis of the magnetized supersonic downflows in a number of ARs and survey their characteristics. We analyze spectro-polarimetric scans of parts of 13 ARs obtained in the infrared He I 10830 \r{A} triplet formed in the upper chromosphere recorded with the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) mounted at the GREGOR solar telescope. We retrieve the line-of-sight velocities and the magnetic field vector using the HeLIx+ inversion code that assumes Milne-Eddington atmospheres. We find magnetized supersonic downflows in all the ARs, with larger area coverage by such flows in ARs observed during their emerging phase. The fact that supersonic downflows were…
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