Title: A New View: Active Regions with Hinode
1A New View Active Regionswith Hinode
2A New View Active Regionswith Hinode
Chiefly with the X-Ray Telescope (XRT)
3XRT Sciences
Imaging observation of the soft X-ray/XUV corona
with advanced imaging/temperature-diagnostic
capabilities
Vast varieties of active, or even non-active,
phenomena in the corona
- Photosphere-Corona connection
- Formation and heating of the coronaincl. energy
transport, storage, and dissipation - Outer-corona investigationextending to CME and
solar wind investigations
An-order-of-magnitude increased exposure cadence
as compared to Yohkoh/SXT, particularly for
non-flare observations
4Temperature Diagnostics with XRT
- Optimized filter selection and layout
- Adjacent filter pairs for temperature
diagnostics - Both SXT-like and TRACE-like filters included in
the set
Low temperature (?1 MK) diagnostics
High-temperature plasmas
5Scientific Location of Hinode XRT(Angular
resolution and temperature range)
Yohkoh/SXT (Full Sun)
Hinode/XRT (Full Sun)
Temperature range
2 MK
SoHO/EIT (Full Sun)
TRACE (Partial)
Angular resolution (CCD Pixel Size)
2.5
1
0.5
6Active Regions
- Transient activities in the corona
Microflares, jets, ... - Evolution of sunspots and their surroundings
Magnetic structure and temperature structure - Interaction with ambient regions Coronal holes
and quiet regions - Magnetic field evolution and energy storage
Leading to flares and/or eruptions - Coronal (loop) heating
7Transient Activities
8NOAA 10923
(Kano 2007)
a
d h
c
e
g
b
i
f
- Nine events occurred
- at 8 positions.
GOES Level stayed around A5
9Shimizu 1993, 2004
10Positions of Micro-flares
(Kano 2007)
(Shimojo 2007)
Point-like
Single-loop
Multi-loop
11Positions of Micro-flares
(Kano 2007)
(Shimojo 2007)
Point-like
Single-loop
Multi-loop
12(Kano 2007)
emerging
cancelling
13Jet Activities around an Active Region (NOAA AR
10923)
14Structure and Evolution around SunspotsMagnetic
and ThermalCoronal (Loop) Heating
15Light Bridges in Sunspot Umbra
16X-ray Loops Rooted on Light Bridges
17Occasional Brightening of X-Ray Loops Rooted on
the Light Bridges
18Filter Ratio Map with XRT (Reale et al. 2007)
4.0 MK
NOAA AR 10923 12 Nov. 2006
1.4 MK
19X-ray Loops around a Sunspot
XRT Thin-Be 14 Nov. 2006 212331 UT
20EUV Loops around a Sunspot
TRACE 171A 14 Nov. 2006 212330 UT
21Spatial Relationship between X-ray and EUV Loops
22Hinode/XRT Al/Poly
SoHO/EIT 171Å
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25Lundquist 2007, Narukage 2007
26Magnetic Field Evolution for Energy Storage
27Loop Structure for an Impulsive Flare
X
M
C
(Thin-Be Filter)
28Vector Magnetic Field Evolution Towards a Major
Flare
293??NLFF? (level 0 256x128)
(Kusano et al. 2007)
- ?????????????
- ????????????????????(????)
- ??????????
?S?????????
XRT2006.12.13 020818UT
30Interaction with Ambient Corona
31Interaction with Ambient Corona?
ARS Patrol Images 1119 July 2007 Ti/Poly 2.9-s
exposure FFI 2x2 binning
3222 Feb. 2007 180343 UT Al/Mesh 4s
33Continuous Upflow of Plasmas
- Apparent upflow velocity 140 km/s along
(apparently open) field lines. Subsonic
- Temperature 1.3 MK Density 2 x 109 /cm3
- Mass loss rate 2 x 1011 g/s Good fraction
of mass loss rate by solar wind
(Sakao et al. 2007)
(Ti/Poly Filter)
34Variation from Average Intensity Distribution
Average Intensity Distribution for 22 Feb. 2007
1133 1740 UT
35Outflows from a Transient Coronal Hole assoc.
with a Flare (Imada et al. 2007)
FeXV 284 AIntensity
EIS Doppler Map
Blueshift in plage160 km/s
Ejection driven by flare
36Summary
- Hinode is going to provide unique sets of data
for investigating physical (magnetic and thermal)
properties of various active region phenomena,
including, but not limited to, sunspot evolution,
microflares and jets, thermal evolution and
coronal heating, energy storage and release
towards flares, and interaction with ambient
coronal regions.
37Summary
- Magnetic data from SOT will serve as the backbone
in understanding active region properties. In
this regard, detailed comparison of coronal data
from XRT and EIS with SOT magnetic data (together
with their temporal relationships) is crucial for
active region studies. - More to come...