coronal plasma
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2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. 225
Author(s):  
Richard J. Morton ◽  
Ajay K. Tiwari ◽  
Tom Van Doorsselaere ◽  
James A. McLaughlin

Abstract Propagating transverse waves are thought to be a key transporter of Poynting flux throughout the Sun’s atmosphere. Recent studies have shown that these transverse motions, interpreted as the magnetohydrodynamic kink mode, are prevalent throughout the corona. The associated energy estimates suggest the waves carry enough energy to meet the demands of coronal radiative losses in the quiescent Sun. However, it is still unclear how the waves deposit their energy into the coronal plasma. We present the results from a large-scale study of propagating kink waves in the quiescent corona using data from the Coronal Multi-channel Polarimeter (CoMP). The analysis reveals that the kink waves appear to be weakly damped, which would imply low rates of energy transfer from the large-scale transverse motions to smaller scales via either uniturbulence or resonant absorption. This raises questions about how the observed kink modes would deposit their energy into the coronal plasma. Moreover, these observations, combined with the results of Monte Carlo simulations, lead us to infer that the solar corona displays a spectrum of density ratios, with a smaller density ratio (relative to the ambient corona) in quiescent coronal loops and a higher density ratio in active-region coronal loops.


2021 ◽  
Vol 922 (2) ◽  
pp. 109
Author(s):  
Joseph Plowman

Abstract Much of our understanding of the state of coronal plasmas comes from observations that are optically thin. This means that light travels freely through the corona without being materially affected by it, which allows it to be easily seen through, but also results in a line-of-sight degeneracy that has previously thwarted attempts to recover the three-dimensional structure of the coronal plasma. However, although the corona is disorganized in the line-of-sight direction, it is highly organized in the field-aligned direction. This paper demonstrates how to exploit this organization to resolve the line-of-sight degeneracy in the plasma properties using a suitable magnetic field structure. This allows, for the first time, the two-dimensional optically thin plasma observations to directly drive the three-dimensional plasma reconstruction throughout an entire active region (or larger). A preliminary investigation with a potential field is shown, finding a solution which clearly resembles the real solar data, even with a single perspective. The results indicate that there is ample information in the resulting residuals that can be used to refine the magnetic field structure, suggesting that these residuals can in turn be used to directly constrain the magnetic field extrapolations used in the reconstruction. The paper concludes with a discussion of how these residuals can in turn be used to directly drive the magnetic field extrapolations.


Author(s):  
Anton A. Reva ◽  
Sergey V. Kuzin ◽  
Alexey S. Kirichenko ◽  
Artem S. Ulyanov ◽  
Ivan P. Loboda ◽  
...  

Investigations of solar activity require information about plasma in a wide range of temperatures. Generally, researchers require observations from telescopes producing monochromatic images of coronal plasma with cool, warm, and hot temperatures. Until now, monochromatic telescopic imaging has been made only in the Mg XII 8.42 Å line with the Mg XII spectroheliograph on board CORONAS-I, CORONAS-F, and CORONAS-PHOTON satellites. The Mg XII spectroheliograph used Bragg crystal optics. Its design is based on two main principles: (1) to select the working wavelength and the crystal in such a way that reflection occurs at small incident angles; (2) to use the aperture of the mirror as a spectral filter. We believe that these design principles can be applied to other spectral lines. In this article, we will review the design of the Mg XII spectroheliograph and present our thoughts on how to apply these principles to the Si XIV 6.18 Å and Si XIII 6.65 Å lines. A combination of the monochromatic Mg XII 8.42 Å, Si XIV 6.18 Å, and Si XIII 6.65 Å images will help us to study the dynamics of the hot plasma in the solar corona.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eoin Carley ◽  
Baptiste Cecconi ◽  
Hamish Reid ◽  
Carine Briand ◽  
K. Sasikumar Raja ◽  
...  

<p>Eruptive activity in the solar corona can often lead to the propagation of shockwaves. In the radio domain the primary signature of such shocks are type II radio bursts, observed in dynamic spectra as bands of emission slowly drifting towards lower frequencies over time. These radio bursts can sometimes have inhomogeneous and fragmented fine structure, but the cause of this fine structure is currently unclear. Here we observe several type II radio bursts on 2019-March-20th using the New Extension in Nancay Upgrading LOFAR (NenuFAR), a radio interferometer observing between 10-85 MHz. We show  that the distribution of size-scales of density perturbations associated with the fine structure of one type II follows a power law with a spectral index of -1.71, which closely matches the value of -5/3 expected of fully developed turbulence. We determine this turbulence to be upstream of the shock, in background coronal plasma at a heliocentric distance of ~2 R<sub>sun</sub>. The observed inertial size-scales of the turbulent density inhomogeneities range from ~62 Mm to ~209 km. This shows that type II fine structure and fragmentation can be due to shock propagation through an inhomogeneous and turbulent coronal plasma, and we discuss the implications of this on electron acceleration in the coronal shock.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 012901
Author(s):  
J. Latham ◽  
E. V. Belova ◽  
M. Yamada

2020 ◽  
Vol 642 ◽  
pp. A4 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Velli ◽  
L. K. Harra ◽  
A. Vourlidas ◽  
N. Schwadron ◽  
O. Panasenco ◽  
...  

Context. The launch of Parker Solar Probe (PSP) in 2018, followed by Solar Orbiter (SO) in February 2020, has opened a new window in the exploration of solar magnetic activity and the origin of the heliosphere. These missions, together with other space observatories dedicated to solar observations, such as the Solar Dynamics Observatory, Hinode, IRIS, STEREO, and SOHO, with complementary in situ observations from WIND and ACE, and ground based multi-wavelength observations including the DKIST observatory that has just seen first light, promise to revolutionize our understanding of the solar atmosphere and of solar activity, from the generation and emergence of the Sun’s magnetic field to the creation of the solar wind and the acceleration of solar energetic particles. Aims. Here we describe the scientific objectives of the PSP and SO missions, and highlight the potential for discovery arising from synergistic observations. Here we put particular emphasis on how the combined remote sensing and in situ observations of SO, that bracket the outer coronal and inner heliospheric observations by PSP, may provide a reconstruction of the solar wind and magnetic field expansion from the Sun out to beyond the orbit of Mercury in the first phases of the mission. In the later, out-of-ecliptic portions of the SO mission, the solar surface magnetic field measurements from SO and the multi-point white-light observations from both PSP and SO will shed light on the dynamic, intermittent solar wind escaping from helmet streamers, pseudo-streamers, and the confined coronal plasma, and on solar energetic particle transport. Methods. Joint measurements during PSP–SO alignments, and magnetic connections along the same flux tube complemented by alignments with Earth, dual PSP–Earth, and SO-Earth, as well as with STEREO-A, SOHO, and BepiColumbo will allow a better understanding of the in situ evolution of solar-wind plasma flows and the full three-dimensional distribution of the solar wind from a purely observational point of view. Spectroscopic observations of the corona, and optical and radio observations, combined with direct in situ observations of the accelerating solar wind will provide a new foundation for understanding the fundamental physical processes leading to the energy transformations from solar photospheric flows and magnetic fields into the hot coronal plasma and magnetic fields and finally into the bulk kinetic energy of the solar wind and solar energetic particles. Results. We discuss the initial PSP observations, which already provide a compelling rationale for new measurement campaigns by SO, along with ground- and space-based assets within the synergistic context described above.


2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 441-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valery M. Nakariakov ◽  
Dmitrii Y. Kolotkov

The corona of the Sun is a unique environment in which magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves, one of the fundamental processes of plasma astrophysics, are open to a direct study. There is striking progress in both observational and theoretical research of MHD wave processes in the corona, with the main recent achievements summarized as follows: ▪  Both periods and wavelengths of the principal MHD modes of coronal plasma structures, such as kink, slow and sausage modes, are confidently resolved. ▪  Scalings of various parameters of detected waves and waveguiding plasma structures allow for the validation of theoretical models. In particular, kink oscillation period scales linearly with the length of the oscillating coronal loop, clearly indicating that they are eigenmodes of the loop. Damping of decaying kink and standing slow oscillations depends on the oscillation amplitudes, demonstrating the importance of nonlinear damping. ▪  The dominant excitation mechanism for decaying kink oscillations is associated with magnetized plasma eruptions. Propagating slow waves are caused by the leakage of chromospheric oscillations. Fast wave trains could be formed by waveguide dispersion. ▪  The knowledge gained in the study of coronal MHD waves provides ground for seismological probing of coronal plasma parameters, such as the Alfvén speed, the magnetic field and its topology, stratification, temperature, fine structuring, polytropic index, and transport coefficients.


2020 ◽  
Vol 496 (3) ◽  
pp. 3035-3042 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Lopin ◽  
I Nagorny

ABSTRACT The dispersive properties of fast oscillations in a coronal plasma slab are studied. These oscillations are assumed to be generated by an external source, located at a finite distance from the slab. It is shown that the problem reduces to examination of the normal modes of a system, consisting of a slab cavity and a finitely distant rigid boundary. The relation that governs the eigenfrequencies of the system is derived. Both the kink and the sausage modes are excited. The main finding indicates that the principal kink mode is trapped not for all axial wavenumbers. It has a non-zero cut-off wavenumber and can exist either as a trapped mode or as a leaky mode. This cut-off tends to zero for infinitely distant sources, in accordance with the well-known result from the normal mode analysis. The expressions for the frequency and damping rate of the leaky principal kink mode are derived. The effect of a finitely distant rigid boundary on the higher transverse-order kink modes and all the sausage modes is found to be only minor, when the distance between the source and the slab is much more than the transverse size of the slab. The applications of the obtained results in coronal seismology are discussed.


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