论文标题
来自磁流失动力的加热曲线的纳米光泽诊断
Nanoflare Diagnostics from Magnetohydrodynamic Heating Profiles
论文作者
论文摘要
事实证明,冠状加热的纳米光范式非常有希望,可以解释太阳能电晕中炎热的数百万度环。在此范式中,局部加热事件提供了足够的能量,以将太阳能大气加热到其观察到的温度。然而,严格地对此过程进行建模已被证明很困难,因为它需要对磁场动力学和重新连接以及等离子体对磁扰动的响应进行准确处理。在本文中,我们结合了由光谱运动驱动的冠状动力区域等离子体的完全3D磁氢动力学(MHD)模拟,并与空间平均,时间依赖性的流体动力学(HD)模拟冠状循环,以获得与观察性区域相比,可以进行定量的有力观测值,与观察性区域相比。我们从MHD模拟中采用重新连接的现场线的行为,并使用它们来填充HD模型以获得血浆的热力学演化,然后再进行发射测量分布。我们发现,MHD模型的光电驾驶只会产生非常低频的纳米洛雷(Nanoflare)加热,这无法说明由低温发射测量斜率测量的全部活性区域核心观测值。此外,我们计算出表现出集体行为的场线的空间和时间分布,并认为循环是由于随机通电发生在相邻田间线的簇上发生的。
The nanoflare paradigm of coronal heating has proven extremely promising for explaining the presence of hot, multi-million degree loops in the solar corona. In this paradigm, localized heating events supply enough energy to heat the solar atmosphere to its observed temperatures. Rigorously modeling this process, however, has proven difficult, since it requires an accurate treatment of both the magnetic field dynamics and reconnection as well as the plasma's response to magnetic perturbations. In this paper, we combine fully 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of coronal active region plasma driven by photospheric motions with spatially-averaged, time-dependent hydrodynamic (HD) modeling of coronal loops to obtain physically motivated observables that can be quantitatively compared with observational measurements of active region cores. We take the behavior of reconnected field lines from the MHD simulation and use them to populate the HD model to obtain the thermodynamic evolution of the plasma and subsequently the emission measure distribution. We find the that the photospheric driving of the MHD model produces only very low-frequency nanoflare heating which cannot account for the full range of active region core observations as measured by the low-temperature emission measure slope. Additionally, we calculate the spatial and temporal distributions of field lines exhibiting collective behavior, and argue that loops occur due to random energization occurring on clusters of adjacent field lines.