484 research outputs found
Spectroscopic Observations of Hot Lines Constraining Coronal Heating in Solar Active Regions
EUV observations of warm coronal loops suggest that they are bundles of
unresolved strands that are heated impulsively to high temperatures by
nanoflares. The plasma would then have the observed properties (e.g., excess
density compared to static equilibrium) when it cools into the 1-2 MK range. If
this interpretation is correct, then very hot emission should be present
outside of proper flares. It is predicted to be vey faint, however. A critical
element for proving or refuting this hypothesis is the existence of hot, very
faint plasmas which should be at amounts predicted by impulsive heating. We
report on the first comprehensive spectroscopic study of hot plasmas in active
regions. Data from the EIS spectrometer on Hinode were used to construct
emission measure distributions in quiescent active regions in the 1-5 MK
temperature range. The distributions are flat or slowly increasing up to
approximately 3 MK and then fall off rapidly at higher temperatures. We show
that active region models based on impulsive heating can reproduce the observed
EM distributions relatively well. Our results provide strong new evidence that
coronal heating is impulsive in nature.Comment: ApJ, 2009, in pres
Hot coronal loops associated with umbral brightenings
We analyzed AIA/SDO high-cadence images in all bands, HMI/SDO data, soft
X-ray images from SXI/GOES-15, and Halpha images from the GONG network. We
detected umbral brightenings that were visible in all AIA bands as well as in
Halpha. Moreover, we identified hot coronal loops that connected the
brightenings with nearby regions of opposite magnetic polarity. These loops
were initially visible in the 94 A band, subsequently in the 335 A band, and in
one case in the 211 A band. A differential emission measure analysis revealed
plasma with an average temperature of about 6.5x10^6 K. This behavior suggests
cooling of impulsively heated loops.Comment: A&A, 2013, in pres
Coronal fuzziness modelled with pulse-heated multistranded loop systems
Coronal active regions are observed to get fuzzier and fuzzier (i.e. more and
more confused and uniform) in harder and harder energy bands or lines. We
explain this evidence as due to the fine multi-temperature structure of coronal
loops. To this end, we model bundles of loops made of thin strands, each heated
by short and intense heat pulses. For simplicity, we assume that the heat
pulses are all equal and triggered only once in each strand at a random time.
The pulse intensity and cadence are selected so as to have steady active region
loops ( MK), on the average. We compute the evolution of the confined
heated plasma with a hydrodynamic loop model. We then compute the emission
along each strand in several spectral lines, from cool ( MK), to warm
( MK) lines, detectable with Hinode/EIS, to hot X-ray lines. The strands
are then put side-by-side to construct an active region loop bundle. We find
that in the warm lines ( MK) the loop emission fills all the available
image surface. Therefore the emission appears quite uniform and it is difficult
to resolve the single loops, while in the cool lines the loops are considerably
more contrasted and the region is less fuzzy. The main reasons for this effect
are that, during their evolution, i.e. pulse heating and slow cooling, each
strand spends a relatively long time at temperatures around MK, and that
it has a high emission measure during that phase, so the whole region appears
more uniform or smudged. We make the prediction that the fuzziness should be
reduced in the hot UV and X-ray lines.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figure
Observational features of equatorial coronal hole jets
Collimated ejections of plasma called "coronal hole jets" are commonly
observed in polar coronal holes. However, such coronal jets are not only a
specific features of polar coronal holes but they can also be found in coronal
holes appearing at lower heliographic latitudes. In this paper we present some
observations of "equatorial coronal hole jets" made up with data provided by
the STEREO/SECCHI instruments during a period comprising March 2007 and
December 2007. The jet events are selected by requiring at least some
visibility in both COR1 and EUVI instruments. We report 15 jet events, and we
discuss their main features. For one event, the uplift velocity has been
determined as about 200 km/s, while the deceleration rate appears to be about
0.11 km/s2, less than solar gravity. The average jet visibility time is about
30 minutes, consistent with jet observed in polar regions. On the basis of the
present dataset, we provisionally conclude that there are not substantial
physical differences between polar and equatorial coronal hole jets.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Annales
Geophysicae, Special Issue:'Three eyes on the Sun-multi-spacecraft studies of
the corona and impacts on the heliosphere
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