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Issue A&A
Volume 447, Number 1, February III 2006
Page(s) 343 - 354
Section The Sun
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20054000

A&A 447, 343-354 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054000

Fine structure, magnetic field and heating of sunspot penumbrae

H. C. Spruit1 and G. B. Scharmer2

1  Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Box 1317, 85741 Garching, Germany
    e-mail: henk@mpa-garching.mpg.de
2  Institute for Solar Physics, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, AlbaNova University Center, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden

(Received 5 August 2005 / Accepted 12 September 2005 )

Abstract
We interpret penumbral filaments as due to convection in field-free, radially aligned gaps just below the visible surface of the penumbra, intruding into a nearly potential field above. This solves the classical discrepancy between the large heat flux and the low vertical velocities observed in the penumbra. The presence of the gaps causes strong small-scale fluctuations in inclination, azimuth angle and field strength. The field is nearly horizontal in a region around the cusp-shaped top of the gap, thereby providing an environment for Evershed flows. We identify this region with the recently discovered dark penumbral cores. Its darkness has the same cause as the dark lanes in umbral light-bridges, reproduced in numerical simulations by Nordlund & Stein (2005, in preparation). We predict that the large vertical and horizontal gradients of the magnetic field inclination and azimuth in the potential field model will produce the net circular polarization seen in observations. The model also explains the significant elevation of bright filaments above their surroundings. It predicts that dark areas in the penumbra are of two different kinds: dark filament cores containing the most inclined (horizontal) fields, and regions between bright filaments, containing the least inclined field lines.


Key words: Sun: sunspots -- magnetic fields -- convection





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