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XIANG Chao, XU Zhi, ZHAO Ming-yu, ZHU Bing-qian. Multi-Wavelength Observations of Sunspot Rotation and Analysis of Influencing FactorsJ. Acta Astronomica Sinica, 2026, 67(2): 20. DOI: 10.15940/j.cnki.0001-5245.2026.02.007
Citation: XIANG Chao, XU Zhi, ZHAO Ming-yu, ZHU Bing-qian. Multi-Wavelength Observations of Sunspot Rotation and Analysis of Influencing FactorsJ. Acta Astronomica Sinica, 2026, 67(2): 20. DOI: 10.15940/j.cnki.0001-5245.2026.02.007

Multi-Wavelength Observations of Sunspot Rotation and Analysis of Influencing Factors

  • Sunspots represent regions of highly concentrated magnetic fields on the solar surface. Multi-wavelength observations enable the acquisition of magnetic and dynamical information across different atmospheric layers, thereby facilitating investigations into the formation of non-potential magnetic field configurations. Based on observations from the Chinese H\alpha Solar Explorer (CHASE), which offers the advantage of multi wavelengths observations within the H\alpha spectral window (featuring spatial co-alignment and temporal simultaneity), four sunspots exhibiting light bridge structures were analyzed to investigate their rotational characteristics in both the photosphere and chromosphere. While employing the light bridges within sunspots as tracers, particular attention was paid to the influence of light bridge evolution on the determination of rotational velocities. Key findings include: (1) analysis of all four samples revealed that the angular velocity of sunspot rotation in the line wing (\Delta\lambda=-0.8 Å, \Delta\lambda is the wavelength interval between the H\alpha line core and other wavelengths) and continuum (\Delta\lambda=-2.8 Å) is consistent with angular velocities ranging approximately from 0.5\ (^\circ)/\rmh to 2\ (^\circ)/\rmh ; (2) three of the samples exhibited faster rotational velocities in the line core (chromosphere) compared to the line wing, with a velocity difference of 0.1\ (^\circ)/\rmh , however, dynamic evolution (e.g., morphology and brightness variations of light bridges) significantly influenced the measurements; (3) three sunspots featured radially penetrating light bridges traversing the umbra. Analysis demonstrated that one side of the light bridges displayed a rotational velocity profile characterized by “slow-fast-slow” variations with increasing radial distance across all wavelengths, while the opposite side exhibited a gradually increasing velocity trend, highlighting the non-rigid rotational nature of sunspots. It is critical to consider the effects of sunspot evolution across different spectral wavelengths for multi-band researches of sunspot rotation.
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