The role of the Lorentz force in sunspot equilibrium
Sunspots survive of the solar surface for time-scales ranging between days to months. This requires them to be in an equilibrium involving magnetic fields and hydrodynamic forces. Unfortunately, theoretical models of sunspot equilibrium are very simplified as they assume that spots are static and possess a self-similar and axially symmetric magnetic field. These assumptions neglect the role of small scale variations of the magnetic field along the azimuthal direction produced by umbral dots, light bridges, penumbral filaments, and so forth. We aim at studying whether sunspot equilibrium is maintained once azimuthal fluctuations in the magnetic field, produced by the sunspot fine structure, are taken into account. To this end, we apply the FIRTEZ Stokes inversion code to spectropolarimetric observations to infer the magnetic and thermodynamic parameters in two sunspots located at disk center and observed with two different instruments: one observed from the ground with the 1.5-meter German GREGOR Telescope and another with the Japanese spacecraft Hinode. We compare our results with three dimensional radiative magnetohydrodynamic simulations of a sunspot carried out with the MURAM code. From our analysis we infer clear variations in the gas pressure and density of the plasma directly related to fluctuations in the Lorentz force and associated with the filamentary structure in the penumbra. Results from the two observed sunspots are in excellent qualitative and quantitative agreement with the numerical simulations. These results indicate that the magnetic topology of sunspots along the azimuthal direction is very close to magnetohydrostatic equilibrium, thereby helping to explain why sunspots are such long-lived structures capable of surviving on the solar surface for days or even full solar rotations.
2004 PhD at the University of Goettingen, Germany. Supervisors: Sami Solanki & Franz Kneer.
2004-2008 Post-doc and Project Scientist at HAO, USA working on the HMI instrument and VFISV inversion code with Steven Tomczyk, Aimee Norton et al.
2008-2010 Tenure-track position at Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Goettingen, Germany.
2010-present: staff scientist at the Institute for Solar Physics (former Kiepenheuer Institute) in Freiburg, German