Title: Flare Flux vs. Magnetic Flux
1Flare Flux vs. Magnetic Flux
- extending previous studies to new regimes
2Fisher et al. (1998) found that active region
(AR) non-flare soft X-ray luminosity is LSXR ?
?1.19.
- ? is total
- unsigned
- magnetic
- flux
- rs is the
- Spearman
- rank-order coefficient
They did a principle components analysis,
including LSXR vs. properties of B, J, and
other aspects of photospheric fields the
correlation with ? was the most significant.
3Building upon this work, Pevtsov et al. (2003)
looked at non-flare LSXR vs. ? beyond AR fields.
LSXR ? ?1.15
- Our group has taken to referring to this
relationship as Pevtsovs Law.
4Building upon this work, Pevtsov et al. (2003)
looked at non-flare LSXR vs. ? beyond AR fields.
G,K,M dwarfs T-Tauri stars
whole Sun ARs X-ray bright
points quiet sun
LSXR ? ?1.15
- Our group has taken to referring to this
relationship as Pevtsovs Law.
5Pevtsov et al. (2003) correlated non-flare soft
X-ray luminosity LSXR vs. magnetic flux over 12
dex.
G,K,M dwarfs T-Tauri stars
whole Sun ARs X-ray bright
points quiet sun
LSXR ? ?1.15
- Our group has taken to referring to this
relationship as Pevtsovs Law.
6Q How does GOES flare flux vary with ??
- Slope differs! (but N is low)
- AR GOES flux is averaged over disk-passage time ?
(see below) - ? whole-AR
7RHESSI can do MUCH BETTER than my sophomoric
approach!
- One could spatially bin RHESSI flare emission,
and correlate that emission with MDIs ? from the
same bins. - There might be considerable scatter in RHESSI
emission vs. MDIs ?, since flares have a
power-law distribution. - But perhaps less ? participates in smaller
flares.
8Weve got the entire MDI full-disk magnetogram
archive, through fall 2007, on local machines.
- We can easily copy the RHESSI-era data from the
archive to a machine thats cross-mounted with
RHESSI data.
9A Couple of Slides on Flare Statistics Follow
10ASIDE Its been known since the dark ages that
flares obey a power-law distribution.
- From Hudson (1991), this plot shows results from
several studies. - Power laws (a.k.a., polynomials) are scale
invariant i.e., there is no characteristic or
average flare energy.
11Schrijver (2007) found a rough maximum GOES flare
flux vs. magnetic flux near polarity inversion
lines (PILs).
- R is the summed
- ? near PILs
As expected, there are more weak flares than
strong flares.
12It might be that the spectral index ? in the
flare power-law N(E) E? varies with ?.
- Here, Ive added a 3rd dimension to a
Schrijver-like plot.