Physics
Scientific paper
Jan 1996
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1996natur.379..235d&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 379, Issue 6562, pp. 235-237 (1996).
Physics
140
Scientific paper
SUNSPOTS are areas of cooler gas and stronger magnetic fields in the Sun's photosphere (its 'surface'), but just how they form and are maintained has long been a puzzle. It has been proposed1 that small vertical magnetic flux tubes, generated deep within the Sun, develop downflows around them when they emerge at the surface. The downflows bring together a large number of flux tubes in a cluster to form a sunspot, which behaves as a single flux bundle as long as the downflows bind the flux tubes together. Until now, however, it has not been possible to test this model with subsurface observations. Here we use the recently developed technique of travel-time helioseismology2 to detect the presence of strong downflows beneath both sunspots and the bright features known as plages. The flows have a velocity of ~2 kms-1, and they persist to a depth of about 2,000 km. The data suggest, however, that the vertical magnetic field can be a coherent flux bundle only to a depth of ~600 km; below this depth it is possible that the downflows hold together a loose collection of flux tubes to maintain the sunspots that we see.
D'Silva Sydney
Duvall Thomas L.
Harvey Jack W.
Jefferies Stuart M.
Schou Jepser
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