54 research outputs found
An observationally-driven kinetic approach to coronal heating
Coronal heating through the explosive release of magnetic energy remains an
open problem in solar physics. Recent hydrodynamical models attempt an
investigation by placing swarms of 'nanoflares' at random sites and times in
modeled one-dimensional coronal loops. We investigate the problem in three
dimensions, using extrapolated coronal magnetic fields of observed solar active
regions. We apply a nonlinear force-free field extrapolation above an observed
photospheric magnetogram of NOAA active region (AR) 11158. We then determine
the locations, energy contents, and volumes of 'unstable' areas, namely areas
prone to releasing magnetic energy due to locally accumulated electric current
density. Statistical distributions of these volumes and their fractal dimension
are inferred, investigating also their dependence on spatial resolution.
Further adopting a simple resistivity model, we infer the properties of the
fractally distributed electric fields in these volumes. Next, we monitor the
evolution of 10^5 particles (electrons and ions) obeying an initial Maxwellian
distribution with a temperature of 10 eV, by following their trajectories and
energization when subjected to the resulting electric fields. For computational
convenience, the length element of the magnetic-field extrapolation is 1
arcsec, much coarser than the particles collisional mean free path in the low
corona. The presence of collisions traps the bulk of the plasma around the
unstable volumes, or current sheets (UCS), with only a tail of the distribution
gaining substantial energy. Assuming that the distance between UCS is similar
to the collisional mean free path we find that the low active-region corona is
heated to 100-200 eV, corresponding to temperatures exceeding 2 MK, within tens
of seconds for electrons and thousands of seconds for ions. Fractally
distributed, nanoflare-triggening fragmented UCS ...Comment: accepted by A&
A First Comparison of Millimeter Continuum and Mg II Ultraviolet Line Emission from the Solar Chromosphere
We present joint observations of the Sun by the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Interface Region Imaging
Spectrograph (IRIS). The observations were made of a solar active region on
2015 December 18 as part of the ALMA science verification effort. A map of the
Sun's continuum emission of size was obtained by ALMA at a
wavelength of 1.25 mm (239 GHz) using mosaicing techniques. A contemporaneous
map of size was obtained in the Mg II h doublet line at
2803.5\AA\ by IRIS. Both mm/submm continuum emission and ultraviolet
(UV) line emission are believed to originate from the solar chromosphere and
both have the potential to serve as powerful and complementary diagnostics of
physical conditions in this poorly understood layer of the solar atmosphere.
While a clear correlation between mm- brightness temperature and
the Mg II h line radiation temperature is observed the slope is ,
perhaps as a result of the fact that these diagnostics are sensitive to
different parts of the chromosphere and/or the Mg II h line source function
includes a scattering component. There is a significant offset between the mean
(1.25 mm) and mean (Mg II), the former being
greater than the latter. Partitioning the maps into "sunspot", "quiet regions",
and "plage regions" we find that the slope of the scatter plots between the
IRIS Mg II h line and the ALMA brightness temperature is 0.4
(sunspot), 0.56 (quiet regions), and 0.66 (plage regions). We suggest that this
change may be caused by the regional dependence of the formation heights of the
IRIS and ALMA diagnostics, and/or the increased degree of coupling between the
UV source function and the local gas temperature in the hotter, denser gas in
plage regions.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
The multi-thermal chromosphere: inversions of ALMA and IRIS data
Numerical simulations of the solar chromosphere predict a diverse thermal
structure with both hot and cool regions. Observations of plage regions in
particular feature broader and brighter chromospheric lines, which suggest that
they are formed in hotter and denser conditions than in the quiet-Sun, but also
implies a non-thermal component whose source is unclear. We revisit the problem
of the stratification of temperature and microturbulence in plage now adding
millimeter continuum observations provided by ALMA to inversions of
near-ultraviolet IRIS spectra as a powerful new diagnostic to disentangle the
two parameters. We fit cool chromospheric holes and track the fast evolution of
compact mm brightenings in the plage region. We use the STiC non-LTE inversion
code to simultaneously fit real ultraviolet and millimeter spectra in order to
infer the thermodynamic parameters of the plasma. We confirm the anticipated
constraining potential of ALMA in non-LTE inversions of the solar chromosphere.
We find significant differences between the inversion results of IRIS data
alone compared to the results of a combination with the mm data: the IRIS+ALMA
inversions have increased contrast and temperature range, and tend to favor
lower values of microturbulence in the chromosphere of plage. The average
brightness temperature of the plage region at 1.25 mm is 8500 K, but the ALMA
maps also show much cooler ( K) and hotter ( K) evolving
features partially seen in other diagnostics. To explain the former, the
inversions require the existence of localized, low temperature regions in the
chromosphere where molecules such as CO could form. The hot features could
sustain such high temperatures due to non-equilibrium hydrogen ionization
effects in a shocked chromosphere - a scenario that is supported by
low-frequency shock wave patterns found in the MgII lines probed by IRIS.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures; accepted in A&A (added references, corrected
typos
Decoding the Pre-Eruptive Magnetic Field Configurations of Coronal Mass Ejections
A clear understanding of the nature of the pre-eruptive magnetic field
configurations of Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) is required for understanding
and eventually predicting solar eruptions. Only two, but seemingly disparate,
magnetic configurations are considered viable; namely, sheared magnetic arcades
(SMA) and magnetic flux ropes (MFR). They can form via three physical
mechanisms (flux emergence, flux cancellation, helicity condensation) . Whether
the CME culprit is an SMA or an MFR, however, has been strongly debated for
thirty years. We formed an International Space Science Institute (ISSI) team to
address and resolve this issue and report the outcome here. We review the
status of the field across modeling and observations, identify the open and
closed issues, compile lists of SMA and MFR observables to be tested against
observations and outline research activities to close the gaps in our current
understanding. We propose that the combination of multi-viewpoint multi-thermal
coronal observations and multi-height vector magnetic field measurements is the
optimal approach for resolving the issue conclusively. We demonstrate the
approach using MHD simulations and synthetic coronal images.
Our key conclusion is that the differentiation of pre-eruptive configurations
in terms of SMAs and MFRs seems artificial. Both observations and modeling can
be made consistent if the pre-eruptive configuration exists in a hybrid state
that is continuously evolving from an SMA to an MFR. Thus, the 'dominant'
nature of a given configuration will largely depend on its evolutionary stage
(SMA-like early-on, MFR-like near the eruption).Comment: Space Science Reviews, accepted for publicatio
The major geoeffective solar eruptions of 2012 March 7: comprehensive Sun-to-Earth analysis
During the interval 2012 March 7-11 the geospace experienced a barrage of intense space weather phenomena including the second largest geomagnetic storm of solar cycle 24 so far. Significant ultra-low-frequency wave enhancements and relativistic-electron dropouts in the radiation belts, as well as strong energetic-electron injection events in the magnetosphere were observed. These phenomena were ultimately associated with two ultra-fast (>2000 kms-1) coronal mass ejections (CMEs), linked to two X-class flares launched on early 2012 March 7. Given that both powerful events originated from solar active region NOAA 11429 and their onsets were separated by less than an hour, the analysis of the two events and the determination of solar causes and geospace effects are rather challenging. Using satellite data from a flotilla of solar, heliospheric and magnetospheric missions a synergistic Sun-to-Earth study of diverse observational solar, interplanetary and magnetospheric data sets was performed. It was found that only the second CME was Earth-directed. Using a novel method, we estimated its near-Sun magnetic field at 13R⊙ to be in the range [0.01, 0.16] G. Steep radial fall-offs of the near-Sun CME magnetic field are required to match the magnetic fields of the corresponding interplanetary CME (ICME) at 1 AU. Perturbed upstream solar-wind conditions, as resulting from the shock associated with the Earth-directed CME, offer a decent description of its kinematics. The magnetospheric compression caused by the arrival at 1 AU of the shock associated with the ICME was a key factor for radiation-belt dynamics.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
A Helicity-Based Method to Infer the CME Magnetic Field Magnitude in Sun and Geospace: Generalization and Extension to Sun-Like and M-Dwarf Stars and Implications for Exoplanet Habitability
Patsourakos et al. (Astrophys. J. 817, 14, 2016) and Patsourakos and
Georgoulis (Astron. Astrophys. 595, A121, 2016) introduced a method to infer
the axial magnetic field in flux-rope coronal mass ejections (CMEs) in the
solar corona and farther away in the interplanetary medium. The method, based
on the conservation principle of magnetic helicity, uses the relative magnetic
helicity of the solar source region as input estimates, along with the radius
and length of the corresponding CME flux rope. The method was initially applied
to cylindrical force-free flux ropes, with encouraging results. We hereby
extend our framework along two distinct lines. First, we generalize our
formalism to several possible flux-rope configurations (linear and nonlinear
force-free, non-force-free, spheromak, and torus) to investigate the dependence
of the resulting CME axial magnetic field on input parameters and the employed
flux-rope configuration. Second, we generalize our framework to both Sun-like
and active M-dwarf stars hosting superflares. In a qualitative sense, we find
that Earth may not experience severe atmosphere-eroding magnetospheric
compression even for eruptive solar superflares with energies ~ 10^4 times
higher than those of the largest Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellite (GOES) X-class flares currently observed. In addition, the two
recently discovered exoplanets with the highest Earth-similarity index, Kepler
438b and Proxima b, seem to lie in the prohibitive zone of atmospheric erosion
due to interplanetary CMEs (ICMEs), except when they possess planetary magnetic
fields that are much higher than that of Earth.Comment: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017SoPh..292...89
Probing the Physics of the Solar Atmosphere with the Multi-slit Solar Explorer (MUSE). I. Coronal Heating
The Multi-slit Solar Explorer (MUSE) is a proposed mission composed of a multislit extreme ultraviolet (EUV) spectrograph (in three spectral bands around 171 Å, 284 Å, and 108 Å) and an EUV context imager (in two passbands around 195 Å and 304 Å). MUSE will provide unprecedented spectral and imaging diagnostics of the solar corona at high spatial (≤0.″5) and temporal resolution (down to ∼0.5 s for sit-and-stare observations), thanks to its innovative multislit design. By obtaining spectra in four bright EUV lines (Fe ix 171 Å, Fe xv 284 Å, Fe xix-Fe xxi 108 Å) covering a wide range of transition regions and coronal temperatures along 37 slits simultaneously, MUSE will, for the first time, "freeze"(at a cadence as short as 10 s) with a spectroscopic raster the evolution of the dynamic coronal plasma over a wide range of scales: from the spatial scales on which energy is released (≤0.″5) to the large-scale (∼170″ × 170″) atmospheric response. We use numerical modeling to showcase how MUSE will constrain the properties of the solar atmosphere on spatiotemporal scales (≤0.″5, ≤20 s) and the large field of view on which state-of-the-art models of the physical processes that drive coronal heating, flares, and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) make distinguishing and testable predictions. We describe the synergy between MUSE, the single-slit, high-resolution Solar-C EUVST spectrograph, and ground-based observatories (DKIST and others), and the critical role MUSE plays because of the multiscale nature of the physical processes involved. In this first paper, we focus on coronal heating mechanisms. An accompanying paper focuses on flares and CMEs
Fine-scale Explosive Energy Release at Sites of Prospective Magnetic Flux Cancellation in the Core of the Solar Active Region Observed by Hi-C 2.1, IRIS, and SDO
The second Hi-C flight (Hi-C 2.1) provided unprecedentedly high spatial and temporal resolution (~250 km, 4.4 s) coronal EUV images of Fe ix/x emission at 172 Å of AR 12712 on 2018 May 29, during 18:56:21–19:01:56 UT. Three morphologically different types (I: dot-like; II: loop-like; III: surge/jet-like) of fine-scale sudden-brightening events (tiny microflares) are seen within and at the ends of an arch filament system in the core of the AR. Although type Is (not reported before) resemble IRIS bombs (in size, and brightness with respect to surroundings), our dot-like events are apparently much hotter and shorter in span (70 s). We complement the 5 minute duration Hi-C 2.1 data with SDO/HMI magnetograms, SDO/AIA EUV images, and IRIS UV spectra and slit-jaw images to examine, at the sites of these events, brightenings and flows in the transition region and corona and evolution of magnetic flux in the photosphere. Most, if not all, of the events are seated at sites of opposite-polarity magnetic flux convergence (sometimes driven by adjacent flux emergence), implying likely flux cancellation at the microflare's polarity inversion line. In the IRIS spectra and images, we find confirming evidence of field-aligned outflow from brightenings at the ends of loops of the arch filament system. In types I and II the explosion is confined, while in type III the explosion is ejective and drives jet-like outflow. The light curves from Hi-C, AIA, and IRIS peak nearly simultaneously for many of these events, and none of the events display a systematic cooling sequence as seen in typical coronal flares, suggesting that these tiny brightening events have chromospheric/transition region origin
The Origin, Early Evolution and Predictability of Solar Eruptions
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) were discovered in the early 1970s when space-borne coronagraphs revealed that eruptions of plasma are ejected from the Sun. Today, it is known that the Sun produces eruptive flares, filament eruptions, coronal mass ejections and failed eruptions; all thought to be due to a release of energy stored in the coronal magnetic field during its drastic reconfiguration. This review discusses the observations and physical mechanisms behind this eruptive activity, with a view to making an assessment of the current capability of forecasting these events for space weather risk and impact mitigation. Whilst a wealth of observations exist, and detailed models have been developed, there still exists a need to draw these approaches together. In particular more realistic models are encouraged in order to asses the full range of complexity of the solar atmosphere and the criteria for which an eruption is formed. From the observational side, a more detailed understanding of the role of photospheric flows and reconnection is needed in order to identify the evolutionary path that ultimately means a magnetic structure will erupt
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