High resolution and seeing-free spectroscopic observation of a decaying
sunspot was done with the Solar Optical Telescope aboard Hinode satellite. The
target was NOAA 10944 located in the west side of the solar surface from March
2 to March 4, 2007. The umbra included many umbral dots (UDs) with size of ~300
km in continuum light. We report the magnetic structures and Doppler velocity
fields around UDs, based on the Milne-Eddington inversion of the two iron
absorption lines at 6302 angstrom.
The histograms of magnetic field strength(B), inclination angle(i), and
Doppler velocity(v) of UDs showed a center-to-limb variation. Observed at disk
center, UDs had (1)slightly smaller field strength (Delta B=-17 Gauss) and
(2)relative blue shifts (Delta v=28 m s-1) compared to their surroundings. When
the sunspot got close to the limb, UDs and their surroundings showed almost no
difference in the magnetic and Doppler values. This center-to-limb variation
can be understood by the formation height difference in a cusp-shaped
magnetized atmosphere around UDs, due to the weakly magnetized hot gas
intrusion. In addition, some UDs showed oscillatory light curves with multiple
peaks around 10 min, which may indicate the presence of the oscillatory
convection. We discuss our results in the frameworks of two theoretical models,
the monolithic model (Schussler & Vogler 2006) and the field-free intrusion
model (Spruit & Scharmer 2006).Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PAS