5 research outputs found

    The universally growing mode in the solar atmosphere: coronal heating by drift waves

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    The heating of the plasma in the solar atmosphere is discussed within both frameworks of fluid and kinetic drift wave theory. We show that the basic ingredient necessary for the heating is the presence of density gradients in the direction perpendicular to the magnetic field vector. Such density gradients are a source of free energy for the excitation of drift waves. We use only well established basic theory, verified experimentally in laboratory plasmas. Two mechanisms of the energy exchange and heating are shown to take place simultaneously: one due to the Landau effect in the direction parallel to the magnetic field, and another one, stochastic heating, in the perpendicular direction. The stochastic heating i) is due to the electrostatic nature of the waves, ii) is more effective on ions than on electrons, iii) acts predominantly in the perpendicular direction, iv) heats heavy ions more efficiently than lighter ions, and v) may easily provide a drift wave heating rate that is orders of magnitude above the value that is presently believed to be sufficient for the coronal heating, i.e., 6105\simeq 6 \cdot 10^{-5} J/(m3^3s) for active regions and 8106\simeq 8 \cdot 10^{-6} J/(m3^3s) for coronal holes. This heating acts naturally through well known effects that are, however, beyond the current standard models and theories.Comment: To appear in MNRA

    The Geometric Spreading of Coronal Plumes and Coronal Holes

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    The geometric spreading in plumes and in the interplume region in coronal holes is calculated, using analytic and numerical theoretical models, between 1.0 and 5.0 solar radius. We apply a two-scale approximation that permits the rapid local spreading at the base of plumes (f(sub t)) to be evaluated separately from the global spreading (f(sub g)) imposed by coronal hole geometry. We show that f(sub t) can be computed from a potential-field model and f(sub g) can be computed from global magnetohydrodynamic simulations of coronal structure. The approximations are valid when the plasma beta is mail with respect to unity and for a plume separation small with respect to a solar radius

    Coronal Heating: A Comparison of Ion-Cyclotron and Gravity Damping Models

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