Understanding the magnetic field and plasma-$\beta$ along umbral fan loops traced using 3-min slow waves
Ananya Rawat, Girjesh Gupta, Tom Van Doorsselaere, S. Krishna Prasad, and Robertus Erd\'elyi

TL;DR
This study uses 3-minute slow waves in sunspot umbral fan loops to map magnetic field strength and plasma-$eta$ variations from the photosphere to the corona, revealing the dominance of magnetic processes in the upper atmosphere.
Contribution
First to analyze magnetic field and plasma-$eta$ variations along loops using 3-min slow waves in sunspot umbrae, providing new seismological insights.
Findings
Magnetic field decreases from ~2000 G at photosphere to ~200 G in corona.
Plasma-$eta$ ranges from 0.2-0.5 at photosphere to 0.0001-0.001 in corona.
Plasma-$eta$ remains below 1 along the entire loop.
Abstract
The plasma- is an important fundamental physical quantity in solar plasma physics, which determines the dominating process in the solar atmosphere, i.e., magnetic or thermodynamic processes. Here, for the first time, we provide variations of magnetic field and plasma- along magnetically structured loops from the photosphere to the corona. We have selected several fan loops rooted in sunspot umbra observed simultaneously by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph and Solar Dynamics Observatory. The 3-min slow waves enabled us to trace and analyze several fan loops with cross-sectional areas in the lower atmosphere and locate their footpoints at the photosphere. We find the RMS magnetic field strengths in the range 1596-2269 G at the photospheric footpoints of the fan loops, which decrease rapidly to 158-236 G at the coronal footpoints. We estimated the plasma- at…
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