22 research outputs found
A Statistical Study of IRIS Observational Signatures of Nanoflares and Non-thermal Particles
Nanoflares are regarded as one of the major mechanisms of magnetic energy
release and coronal heating in the solar outer atmosphere. We conduct a
statistical study on the response of the chromosphere and transition region to
nanoflares, as observed by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), by
using an algorithm for the automatic detection of these events. The initial
atmospheric response to these small heating events is observed, with IRIS, as
transient brightening at the footpoints of coronal loops heated to high
temperatures (>4 MK). For four active regions, observed over 143 hours, we
detected 1082 footpoint brightenings under the IRIS slit, and for those we
extracted physical parameters from the IRIS Mg II and Si IV spectra that are
formed in the chromosphere and transition region, respectively. We investigate
the distribution of the spectral parameters, and the relationship between the
parameters, also comparing them with predictions from RADYN numerical
simulations of nanoflare-heated loops. We find that these events, and the
presence of non-thermal particles, tend to be more frequent in flare productive
active regions, and where the hot Atmospheric Imaging Assembly 94 \AA\ emission
is higher. We find evidence for highly dynamic motions characterized by strong
Si IV non-thermal velocity (not dependent on the heliocentric x coordinate,
i.e., on the angle between the magnetic field and the line-of-sight) and
asymmetric Mg II spectra. These findings provide tight new constraints on the
properties of nanoflares, and non-thermal particles, in active regions, and
their effects on the lower atmosphere.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, Accepted to Ap