1,077 research outputs found
Radiative hydrodynamic modeling of the Bastille-Day flare (14 July, 2000). I, Numerical simulations
A 1D loop radiative hydrodynamic model that incorporates the effects of gravitational stratification, heat conduction,
radiative losses, external heat input, presence of helium, and Braginskii viscosity is used to simulate elementary flare loops. The physical parameters for the input are taken from observations of the Bastille-Day flare of 2000 July 14. The present analysis shows that: a) the obtained maximum values of the electron density can be considerably higher (4.2 × 10 11 cm −3 or more) in the case of footpoint heating than in the case of apex heating (2.5 × 10 11 cm −3); b) the average cooling time after the flare peak takes less time in the case of footpoint heating than in the case of apex heating; c) the peak apex temperatures are significantly lower (by about 10 MK) for the case of footpoint heating than for apex heating (for the same average loop temperature of about 30 MK). This characteristic would allow to discriminate between different heating positioning; d) in both cases (of apex and footpoint heating), the maximum obtained apex temperature T
max is practically independent of the heating duration σ t , but scales directly with the heating rate E H0 ; e) the maximum obtained densities at the loop apex, n max e,
increase with the heating rate E H0 and heating duration σ t for both footpoint and apex heating. In Paper II we will use the outputs of these hydrodynamic simulations, which cover a wide range of the parameter space of heating rates and durations, as an input for forward-fitting of the multi-loop arcade of the Bastille-day flare
Transverse oscillations of systems of coronal loops
We study the collective kinklike normal modes of a system of several
cylindrical loops using the T-matrix theory. Loops that have similar kink
frequencies oscillate collectively with a frequency which is slightly different
from that of the individual kink mode. On the other hand, if the kink frequency
of a loop is different from that of the others, it oscillates individually with
its own frequency. Since the individual kink frequency depends on the loop
density but not on its radius for typical 1 MK coronal loops, a coupling
between kink oscillations of neighboring loops take place when they have
similar densities. The relevance of these results in the interpretation of the
oscillations studied by \citet{schrijver2000} and \citet{verwichte2004}, in
which transverse collective loop oscillations seem to be detected, is
discussed. In the first case, two loops oscillating in antiphase are observed;
interpreting this motion as a collective kink mode suggests that their
densities are roughly equal. In the second case, there are almost three groups
of tubes that oscillate with similar periods and therefore their dynamics can
be collective, which again seems to indicate that the loops of each group share
a similar density. All the other loops seem to oscillate individually and their
densities can be different from the rest
Transverse oscillations of a multi-stranded loop
We investigate the transverse oscillations of a line-tied multi-stranded
coronal loop composed of several parallel cylindrical strands. First, the
collective fast normal modes of the loop are found with the T-matrix theory.
There is a huge quantity of normal modes with very different frequencies and a
complex structure of the associated magnetic pressure perturbation and velocity
field. The modes can be classified as bottom, middle, and top according to
their frequencies and spatial structure. Second, the temporal evolution of the
velocity and magnetic pressure perturbation after an initial disturbance are
analyzed. We find complex motions of the strands. The frequency analysis
reveals that these motions are a combination of low and high frequency modes.
The complexity of the strand motions produces a strong modulation of the whole
tube movement. We conclude that the presumed internal fine structure of a loop
influences its transverse oscillations and so its transverse dynamics cannot be
properly described by those of an equivalent monolithic loop.Comment: Accepted in Ap
Flare-generated acoustic oscillations in solar and stellar coronal loops
Long period longitudinal oscillations of a flaring coronal loop are studied numerically. In the recent work of
Nakariakov et al. (2004) it has been shown that the time dependence of density and velocity in a flaring loop contain pronounced quasi-harmonic oscillations associated with the 2nd harmonic of a standing slow magnetoacoustic wave. In this work we investigate the physical nature of these oscillations in greater detail, namely, their spectrum (using the periodogram technique) and how heat positioning affects mode excitation. We found that excitation of such oscillations is practically independent
of the location of the heat deposition in the loop. Because of the change of the background temperature and density, the phase shift between the density and velocity perturbations is not exactly a quarter of the period; it varies along the loop and is time dependent, especially in the case of one footpoint (asymmetric) heating
High energy cosmic-ray interactions with particles from the Sun
Cosmic-ray protons with energies above eV passing near the Sun may
interact with photons emitted by the Sun and be excited to a
resonance. When the decays, it produces pions which further decay to
muons and photons which may be detected with terrestrial detectors. A flux of
muons, photon pairs (from decay), or individual high-energy photons
coming from near the Sun would be a rather striking signature, and the flux of
these particles is a fairly direct measure of the flux of cosmic-ray nucleons,
independent of the cosmic-ray composition. In a solid angle within
around the Sun the flux of photon pairs is about \SI{1.3e-3}{}
particles/(kmyr), while the flux of muons is about \SI{0.33e-3}{}
particles/(kmyr). This is beyond the reach of current detectors like
the Telescope Array, Auger, KASCADE-Grande or IceCube. However, the muon flux
might be detectable by next-generation air shower arrays or neutrino detectors
such as ARIANNA or ARA. We discuss the experimental prospects in some detail.
Other cosmic-ray interactions occuring close to the Sun are also briefly
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure
Acoustic oscillations in solar and stellar flaring loops
Evolution of a coronal loop in response to an impulsive energy release is numerically modelled. It is shown that the loop density evolution curves exhibit quasi-periodic perturbations with the periods given approximately by the ratio of the loop length to the average sound speed, associated with the second standing harmonics of an acoustic wave. The density perturbations have a maximum near the loop apex. The corresponding field-aligned flows have a node near the apex. We suggest that the quasi-periodic pulsations with periods in the range 10-300 s, frequently observed in flaring coronal loops in the radio, visible light and X-ray bands, may be produced by the second standing harmonic of the acoustic mode
Global Energetics of Solar Flares: III. Non thermal Energies
This study entails the third part of a global flare energetics project, in
which Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) data of 191 M and
X-class flare events from the first 3.5 yrs of the Solar Dynamics Observatory
(SDO) mission are analyzed. We fit a thermal and a nonthermal component to
RHESSI spectra, yielding the temperature of the differential emission measure
(DEM) tail, the nonthermal power law slope and flux, and the thermal/nonthermal
cross-over energy . From these parameters we calculate the
total nonthermal energy in electrons with two different
methods: (i) using the observed cross-over energy as
low-energy cutoff, and (ii) using the low-energy cutoff
predicted by the warm thick-target bremsstrahlung model of Kontar et al. {\bf
Based on a mean temperature of MK in active regions we find
low-energy cutoff energies of keV for the
warm-target model, which is significantly lower than the cross-over energies
keV. Comparing with the statistics of magnetically
dissipated energies and thermal energies
from the two previous studies, we find the following mean (logarithmic) energy
ratios with the warm-target model: ,
, and $E_{\mathrm{th}} = 0.15 \
E_{\mathrm{nt}}$. The total dissipated magnetic energy exceeds the thermal
energy in 95% and the nonthermal energy in 71% of the flare events, which
confirms that magnetic reconnection processes are sufficient to explain flare
energies. The nonthermal energy exceeds the thermal energy in 85\% of the
events, which largely confirms the warm thick-target model.Comment: 34p, 9 Figs., 1 Tabl
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