flare loop
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2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. L33
Author(s):  
Dmitrii Y. Kolotkov ◽  
Valery M. Nakariakov ◽  
Robin Holt ◽  
Alexey A. Kuznetsov

Abstract We present the first multiwavelength simultaneous detection of quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) in a superflare (more than a thousand times stronger than known solar flares) on a cool star, in soft X-rays (SXRs, with XMM-Newton) and white light (WL, with Kepler). It allowed for the first ever analysis of oscillatory processes in a stellar flare simultaneously in thermal and nonthermal emissions, conventionally considered to come from the corona and chromosphere of the star, respectively. The observed QPPs have periods 1.5 ± 0.15 hr (SXR) and 3 ± 0.6 hr (WL), and correlate well with each other. The unique relationship between the observed parameters of QPPs in SXR and WL allowed us to link them with oscillations of the electric current in the flare loop, which directly affect the dynamics of nonthermal electrons and indirectly (via ohmic heating) the thermal plasma. These findings could be considered in favor of the equivalent LCR contour model of a flare loop, at least in the extreme conditions of a stellar superflare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. 268
Author(s):  
Guannan Gao ◽  
Qiangwei Cai ◽  
Shaojie Guo ◽  
Min Wang

Abstract A GOES M1.9 flare took place in active region AR 11153 on 2011 February 9. With a resolution of 200 kHz and a time cadence of 80 ms, the reverse-drifting (RS) type-III bursts, intermittent sequence of type-U bursts, drifting pulsation structure (DPS), and fine structures were observed by the Yunnan Observatories Solar Radio Spectrometer (YNSRS). Combined information revealed by the multiwavelength data indicated that after the DPS was observed by YNSRS, the generation rate of type-U bursts suddenly increased to 5 times what it had been. In this event, the generation rate of type-U bursts may depend on the magnetic-reconnection rate. Our observations are consistent with previous numerical simulation results. After the first plasmoid produced (plasma instability occurred), the magnetic-reconnection rate suddenly increased by 5 to 8 times. Furthermore, after the DPS, the frequency range of the turnover frequency of type-U bursts was obviously broadened to thrice what it was before, which indicates a fluctuation amplitude of the density in the loop top. Our observations also support numerical simulations during the flare-impulsive phase. Turbulence occurs at the top of the flare loop and the plasmoids can trap nonthermal particles, causing density fluctuation at the loop top. The observations are generally consistent with the results of numerical simulations, helping us to better understand the characteristics of the whole physical process of eruption.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. 227
Author(s):  
Yulei Wang ◽  
Xin Cheng ◽  
Mingde Ding ◽  
Quanming Lu

Abstract The dynamics of magnetic reconnection in the solar current sheet (CS) is studied by high-resolution 2.5-dimensional MHD simulation. With the commencing of magnetic reconnection, a number of magnetic islands are formed intermittently and move quickly upward and downward along the CS. Upon collision with the semi-closed flux of the flare loops, the downflow islands cause a second reconnection with a rate comparable with that in the main CS. Though the time-integrated magnetic energy release is still dominated by the reconnection in the main CS, the second reconnection can release substantial magnetic energy, annihilating the main islands and generating secondary islands with various scales at the flare loop top. The distribution function of the flux of the secondary islands is found to follow a power law varying from f ψ ∼ ψ − 1 (small scale) to ψ −2 (large scale), which seems to be independent to background plasma β and thermal conduction (TC). However, the spatial scale and the strength of the termination shocks driven by the main reconnection outflows or islands decrease if β increases or if TC is included. We suggest that the annihilation of magnetic islands at the flare loop top, which is not included in the standard flare model, plays a nonnegligible role in releasing magnetic energy to heat flare plasma and accelerate particles.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (1) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Chengrui Zhou ◽  
Yuandeng Shen ◽  
Xinping Zhou ◽  
Zehao Tang ◽  
Yadan Duan ◽  
...  

Abstract It is unclear whether successive filament eruptions at different sites within a short time interval are physically connected or not. Here, we present the observations of successive eruptions of a small and a large filament in a tripolar magnetic field region whose coronal magnetic field showed as a fan-spine magnetic system. By analyzing the multiwavelength observations taken by the Solar Dynamic Observatory and the extrapolated three-dimensional coronal magnetic field, we find that the two filaments resided respectively in the two lobes that make up the inner fan structure of the fan-spine magnetic system. In addition, a small fan-spine system was also revealed by the squashing factor Q map, which located in the east lobe of the fan structure of the large fan-spine system. The eruption of the small filament was a failed filament eruption, which did not cause any coronal mass ejection (CME) except for three flare ribbons and two post-flare-loop systems connecting the three magnetic polarities. The eruption of the large filament not only caused similar post-flare-loop systems and flare ribbons, as observed in the small filament eruption, but also a large-scale CME. Based on our analysis results, we conclude that the two successive filament eruptions were physically connected, in which the topology change caused by the small filament eruption is thought to be the physical linkage. In addition, the eruption of the small fan-spine structure further accelerated the instability and violent eruption of the large filament.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenzhi Ruan ◽  
Yuhao Zhou ◽  
Rony Keppens

Abstract All solar flares demonstrate a prolonged, hourlong post-flare (or gradual) phase, characterized by arcade-like, post-flare loops (PFLs) visible in many extreme ultraviolet (EUV) passbands. These coronal loops are filled with hot – ~30MK – and dense plasma, evaporated from the chromosphere during the impulsive phase of the flare, and they very gradually recover to normal coronal density and temperature conditions. During this gradual cooling down to ~1MK regimes, much cooler – ~0.01MK – and denser coronal rain is frequently observed inside PFLs. Understanding PFL dynamics in this long-duration, gradual phase is crucial to the entire corona-chromosphere mass and energy cycle. Here we report the first simulation in which a solar flare evolves from pre-flare, over impulsive phase all the way into its gradual phase, which successfully reproduces post-flare coronal rain. This rain results from catastrophic cooling caused by thermal instability, and we analyse the entire mass and energy budget evolution driving this sudden condensation phenomenon. We find that the runaway cooling and rain formation also induces the appearance of dark post-flare loop systems, as observed in EUV channels. We confirm and augment earlier observational findings, suggesting that thermal conduction and radiative losses alternately dominate the cooling of PFLs. Since reconnection-driven flares occur in many astrophysical settings (stellar flares, accretion disks, galactic winds and jets), our study suggests a new and natural pathway to introduce multi-thermal structuring.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoko Watanabe ◽  
Hidekatsu Jin ◽  
Shohei Nishimoto ◽  
Shinsuke Imada ◽  
Toshiki Kawai ◽  
...  

AbstractWe attempted to reproduce the total electron content (TEC) variation in the Earth's atmosphere from the temporal variation of the solar flare spectrum of the X9.3 flare on September 6, 2017. The flare spectrum from the Flare Irradiance Spectral Model (FISM), and the flare spectrum from the 1D hydrodynamic model, which considers the physics of plasma in the flare loop, are used in the GAIA model, which is a simulation model of the Earth's whole atmosphere and ionosphere, to calculate the TEC difference. We then compared these results with the observed TEC. When we used the FISM flare spectrum, the difference in TEC from the background was in a good agreement with the observation. However, when the flare spectrum of the 1D-hydrodynamic model was used, the result varied depending on the presence or absence of the background. This difference depending on the models is considered to represent which extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation is primarily responsible for increasing TEC. From the flare spectrum obtained from these models and the calculation result of TEC fluctuation using GAIA, it is considered that the enhancement in EUV emission by approximately 15–35 nm mainly contributes in increasing TEC rather than that of X-ray emission, which is thought to be mainly responsible for sudden ionospheric disturbance. In addition, from the altitude/wavelength distribution of the ionization rate of Earth's atmosphere by GAIA (Ground-to-topside Atmosphere and Ionosphere model for Aeronomy), it was found that EUV radiation of approximately 15–35 nm affects a wide altitude range of 120–300 km, and TEC enhancement is mainly caused by the ionization of nitrogen molecules.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenzhi Ruan ◽  
Chun Xia ◽  
Rony Keppens

<p>Chromospheric evaporations are frequently observed at the footpoints of flare loops in flare events. The evaporations flows driven by thermal conduction or fast electron deposition often have high speed of hundreds km/s. Since the speed of the observed evaporation flows is comparable to the local Alfven speed, it is reasonable to consider the triggering of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. Here we revisit a scenario which stresses the importance of the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) proposed by Fang et al. (2016). This scenario suggests that evaporations flows from two footpoints of a flare loop can meet each other at the looptop and produce turbulence there via KHI. The produced KHI turbulence can play important roles in particle accelerations and generation of strong looptop hard X-ray sources. We investigate whether evaporation flows can produce turbulence inside the flare loop with the help of numerical simulation. KHI turbulence is successfully produced in our simulation. The synthesized soft X-ray curve demonstrating a clear quasi-periodic pulsation (QPP) with period of 26 s. The QPP is caused by a locally trapped, fast standing wave that resonates in between KHI vortices.</p><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoko Watanabe ◽  
Hidekatsu Jin ◽  
Shohei Nishimoto ◽  
Shinsuke Imada ◽  
Toshiki Kawai ◽  
...  

Abstract We attempted to reproduce the total electron content (TEC) variation in the Earth's atmosphere from the temporal variation of the solar flare spectrum of the X9.3 flare on September 6, 2017. The flare spectrum from the Flare Irradiance Spectral Model (FISM), and the flare spectrum from the 1D hydrodynamic model, which considers the physics of plasma in the flare loop, are used in the GAIA model, which is a simulation model of the Earth's whole atmosphere and ionosphere, to calculate the TEC difference. We then compared these results with the observed TEC. When we used the FISM flare spectrum, the difference in TEC from the background was in a good agreement with the observation. However, when the flare spectrum of the 1D-hydrodynamic model was used, the result varied depending on the presence or absence of the background. This difference depending on the models is considered to represent which extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation is primarily responsible for increasing TEC. From the flare spectrum obtained from these models and the calculation result of TEC fluctuation using GAIA, it is considered that the enhancement in EUV emission by approximately 15–35 nm mainly contributes in increasing TEC rather than that of X-ray emission, which is thought to be mainly responsible for sudden ionospheric disturbance. In addition, from the altitude/wavelength distribution of the ionization rate of Earth's atmosphere by GAIA (Ground-to-topside atmosphere and ionosphere model for aeronomy), it was found that EUV radiation of approximately 15–35 nm affects a wide altitude range of 120–300 km, and TEC enhancement is mainly caused by the ionization of nitrogen molecules. (265 words)


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (8) ◽  
pp. 1137-1145
Author(s):  
L. V. Filatov ◽  
V. F. Melnikov

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