The ratio of penumbral to umbral area of sunspots is an important topic for
solar and geophysical studies. Hathaway (Solar Physics, 286, 347, 2013) found a
curious behaviour in this parameter for small sunspot groups (areas smaller
than 100 millionths of solar hemisphere, msh) using records from Royal
Greenwich Observatory (RGO). Hathaway showed that penumbra-umbra ratio
decreased smoothly from more than 7 in 1905 to lower than 3 by 1930 and then
increased to almost 8 in 1961. Thus, Hathaway proposed the existence of a
secular variation in the penumbra-umbra area ratio. In order to confirm that
secular variation, we employ data of the sunspot catalogue published by the
Coimbra Astronomical Observatory (COI) for the period 1929-1941. Our results
disagree with the penumbra-umbra ratio found by Hathaway for that period.
However, the behaviour of this ratio for large (areas greater or equal than 100
msh) and small groups registered in COI during 1929-1941 is similar to data
available from RGO for the periods 1874-1914 and 1950-1976. Nevertheless, while
the average values and time evolution of the ratio in large groups is similar
to the ratio for small groups according to Coimbra data (1929-1941) it is not
analogous for RGO data for the same period. We also found that the behaviour of
the penumbra-umbra area ratio for smaller groups in both observatories is
significantly different. The main difference between the area measurements made
in Coimbra and RGO is associated with the umbra measurements. We would like to
stress that the two observatories used different methods of observation and
while in COI both methodology and instruments did not change during the study
period, some changes were carried out in RGO that could have affected
measurements of umbra and penumbra. These facts illustrate the importance of
the careful recovery of past solar data.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in "Solar Physics