169 research outputs found
Magneto-seismology of solar atmospheric loops by means of longitudinal oscillations
There is increasingly strong observational evidence that slow magnetoacoustic
modes arise in the solar atmosphere. Solar magneto-seismology is a novel tool
to derive otherwise directly un-measurable properties of the solar atmosphere
when magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) wave theory is compared to wave observations.
Here, MHD wave theory is further developed illustrating how information about
the magnetic and density structure along coronal loops can be determined by
measuring the frequencies of the slow MHD oscillations. The application to
observations of slow magnetoacoustic waves in coronal loops is discused.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Proceedings of IAU Symp 286,
Comparative Magnetic Minima, C. H. Mandrini, ed
Magneto-seismology: effect of inhomogeneous magnetic field on transversal coronal loop oscillations
The extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) imagers onboard the planned Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and Solar Orbiter (SO) will offer us the best chance yet of using observations of post-flare loop oscillations to probe the fine structure of the corona. Recently developed magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) wave theory has shown that the properties of loop oscillations depend on their plasma fine structure. Up to this point, many studies have concentrated solely on the effect of plasma density stratification on coronal loop oscillations. In this paper we develop MHD wave theory which models the effect of an inhomogeneous magnetic field on coronal loop oscillations. The results have the potential to be used in testing the efficacy of photospheric magnetic field extrapolations and have important implications regarding magneto-seismology of the corona
MHD wave modes resolved in fine-scale chromospheric magnetic structures
Within the last decade, due to significant improvements in the spatial and
temporal resolution of chromospheric data, magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) wave
studies in this fascinating region of the Sun's atmosphere have risen to the
forefront of solar physics research. In this review we begin by reviewing the
challenges and debates that have manifested in relation to MHD wave mode
identification in fine-scale chromospheric magnetic structures, including
spicules, fibrils and mottles. Next we go on to discuss how the process of
accurately identifying MHD wave modes also has a crucial role to play in
estimating their wave energy flux. This is of cardinal importance for
estimating what the possible contribution of MHD waves is to solar atmospheric
heating. Finally, we detail how such advances in chromospheric MHD wave studies
have also allowed us, for the first time, to implement cutting-edge
magnetoseismological techniques that provide new insight into the
sub-resolution plasma structuring of the lower solar atmosphere.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, to appear as a chapter in the upcoming AGU/Wiley
book "Low-frequency Waves in Space Plasmas
Spatial magneto-seismology : effect of density stratification on the first harmonic amplitude profile of transversal coronal loop oscillations
Context. The new generation of extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) imagers onboard missions such as the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)and Solar Orbiter (SO) will provide the most accurate spatial measurements of post-flare coronal loop oscillations yet. The amplitude profiles of these loop oscillations contain important information about plasma fine structure in the corona.
Aims. We show that the position of the anti-nodes of the amplitude profile of the first harmonic of the standing fast kink wave of a coronal loop relate to the plasma density stratification of that loop.
Methods. The MHD kink transversal waves of coronal loops are modelled both numerically and analytically. The numerical model implements the implicit finite element code pollux. Dispersion relations are derived and solved analytically. The results of the two methods are compared and verified.
Results. Density stratification causes the anti-nodes of the first harmonic to shift towards the loop footpoints. The greater the density stratification, the larger the shift. The anti-node shift of the first harmonic of a semi-circular coronal loop with a density scale height
H = 50 Mm and loop half length L = 100 Mm is approximately 5.6Mm. Shifts in the Mm range are measureable quantities providing valuable information about the subresolution structure of coronal loops.
Conclusions. The measurement of the anti-node shift of the first harmonic of the standing fast kink wave of coronal loops is potentially a new tool in the field of solar magneto-seismology, providing a novel complementary method of probing plasma fine structure in the
corona
Longitudinal oscillations in density stratified and expanding solar waveguides
Waves and oscillations can provide vital information about the internal
structure of waveguides they propagate in. Here, we analytically investigate
the effects of density and magnetic stratification on linear longitudinal
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves. The focus of this paper is to study the
eigenmodes of these oscillations. It is our specific aim is to understand what
happens to these MHD waves generated in flux tubes with non-constant (e.g.,
expanding or magnetic bottle) cross-sectional area and density variations. The
governing equation of the longitudinal mode is derived and solved analytically
and numerically. In particular, the limit of the thin flux tube approximation
is examined. The general solution describing the slow longitudinal MHD waves in
an expanding magnetic flux tube with constant density is found. Longitudinal
MHD waves in density stratified loops with constant magnetic field are also
analyzed. From analytical solutions, the frequency ratio of the first overtone
and fundamental mode is investigated in stratified waveguides. For small
expansion, a linear dependence between the frequency ratio and the expansion
factor is found. From numerical calculations it was found that the frequency
ratio strongly depends on the density profile chosen and, in general, the
numerical results are in agreement with the analytical results. The relevance
of these results for solar magneto-seismology is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, published in ApJ, uses emulateap
Dynamic Behavior of Spicules Inferred from Perpendicular Velocity Components
Understanding the dynamic behavior of spicules, e.g., in terms of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) wave mode(s), is
key to unveiling their role in energy and mass transfer from the photosphere to corona. The transverse, torsional,
and field-aligned motions of spicules have previously been observed in imaging spectroscopy and analyzed
separately for embedded wave-mode identification. Similarities in the Doppler signatures of spicular structures for
both kink and torsional Alfvén wave modes have led to the misinterpretation of the dominant wave mode in these
structures and is a subject of debate. Here, we aim to combine line- of-sight (LOS) and plane-of-sky (POS) velocity
components using the high spatial/temporal resolution Hα imaging-spectroscopy data from the CRisp Imaging
SpectroPolarimeter based at the Swedish Solar Telescope to achieve better insight into the underlying nature of
these motions as a whole. The resultant three-dimensional velocity vectors and the other derived quantities (e.g.,
magnetic pressure perturbations) are used to identify the MHD wave mode(s) responsible for the observed spicule
motion. We find a number of independent examples where the bulk transverse motion of the spicule is dominant
either in the POS or along the LOS. It is shown that the counterstreaming action of the displaced external plasma
due to spicular bulk transverse motion has a similar Doppler profile to that of the m = 0 torsional Alfvén wave
when this motion is predominantly perpendicular to the LOS. Furthermore, the inferred magnetic pressure
perturbations support the kink wave interpretation of observed spicular bulk transverse motion rather than any
purely incompressible MHD wave mode, e.g., the m = 0 torsional Alfvén wav
Evolution of Complex 3D Motions in Spicules
© 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.. Ubiquitous transverse oscillations observed in spicular waveguides, identified as the kink wave-mode had previously been reported along with periodic structural distortions of the flux tubes, observed as cross-sectional width and associated photometric variations. Previous studies identified these perturbations as the observed signatures of concurrent kink and sausage wave-modes. High-resolution H imaging-spectroscopy data from the CRisp Imaging SpectroPolarimeter at the Swedish Solar Telescope are used to analyze the off-limb spicular structures. For the first time, the evolution of the resultant transverse displacement of the flux-tube structure, estimated from the perpendicular velocity components, is analyzed along with longitudinal, cross-sectional width, photometric, and azimuthal shear/torsion variations. The pulse-like nonlinear kink wave-mode shows strong coupling with these observables, with a period-doubling, -tripling aspect, supported by mutual phase relations concentrated around 0° and . The three-dimensional ensemble of the observed dynamical components revealed complexities pertinent to the accurate identification and interpretation of, e.g., linear/nonlinear, coupled/uncoupled magnetohydrodynamical wave-modes in spicules
Solar feature tracking in both spatial and temporal domains
A new method for automated coronal loop tracking, in both spatial and temporal
domains, is presented. The reliability of this technique was tested with TRACE 171A observations.
The application of this technique to a flare-induced kink-mode oscillation, revealed a
3500 km spatial periodicity which occur along the loop edge. We establish a reduction in oscillatory
power, for these spatial periodicities, of 45% over a 322 s interval. We relate the reduction
in oscillatory power to the physical damping of these loop-top oscillations
Selective spatial damping of propagating kink wavesto resonant absorption
There is observational evidence of propagating kink waves driven by photospheric motions. These disturbances, interpreted as kink magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves are attenuated as they propagate upwards in the solar corona. In this paper we show that resonant absorption provides a simple explanation to the spatial damping of these waves. Kink MHD waves are studied using a cylindrical model of solar magnetic flux tubes which includes a non-uniform layer at the tube boundary. Assuming that the frequency is real and the longitudinal wavenumber complex, the damping length and damping per wavelength produced by resonant absorption are analytically calculated. The damping length of propagating kink waves due resonant absorption is a monotonically decreasing function of frequency. For kink waves with low frequencies the damping length is exactly inversely proportional to frequency and we denote this as the TGV relation. When moving to high frequencies the TGV relation continues to be an exceptionally good approximation of the actual dependency of the damping length on frequency. This dependency means that resonant absorption is selective as it favours low frequency waves and can efficiently remove high frequency waves from a broad band spectrum of kink waves. It is selective as the damping length is inversely proportional to frequency so that the damping becomes more severe with increasing frequency. This means that radial inhomogeneity can cause solar waveguides to be a natural low-pass filter for broadband disturbances. Hence kink wave trains travelling along, e.g., coronal loops, will have a greater proportion of the high frequency components dissipated lower down in the atmosphere. This could have important consequences with respect to the spatial distribution of wave heating in the solar atmospher
Spicule jets in the solar atmosphere modeled with resistive MHD and thermal conduction
Using numerical simulations, we study the effects of magnetic resistivity and thermal conductivity in the dynamics and properties of solar jets with characteristics of Type II spicules and cool coronal jets. The dynamic evolution of the jets is governed by the resistive MHD equations with thermal conduction along the magnetic field lines on a 2.5D slice. The magnetic field configuration consists of two symmetric neighboring loops with opposite polarity, used to support reconnection and followed by the plasma jet formation. In total, 10 simulations were carried out with different values of resistivity and thermal conductivity that produce jets with different morphological and thermal properties we quantify. We find that an increase in magnetic resistivity does not produce significant effects on the morphology, velocity, and temperature of the jets. However, thermal conductivity affects both temperature and morphology of the jets. In particular, thermal conductivity causes jets to reach greater heights and increases the temperature of the jet-apex. Also, heat flux maps indicate the jet-apex and corona interchange energy more efficiently than the body of the jet. These results could potentially open a new avenue for plasma diagnostics in the Sun's atmosphere
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