Title: Chromospheric Magnetic Reconnection from an Observer
1Chromospheric Magnetic Reconnection from an
Observers Point of View
- Jongchul Chae
- Seoul National University, Korea
2What is Chromospheric Reconnection ?
- Magnetic reconnection occurring in the
chromosphere and photosphere, not in the corona - Lower Alitudes 0 to 104 km
- Lower temperatures a few 103 K to a few 105 K
- Higher densities
- Small-scale ? low altitude
- Diversities in flow speed, density and
temperature ? strong stratification - Driven reconnection
- Flux emergence
- Supergranular flow
3Observational Signatures
- Canceling Magnetic Features
- Jet-like Features seen in Ha and UV/FUV/EUV
- UV/EUV jets, UV explosive events
- H alpha jets/ surges/ H alpha upflow events
- Chromospheric Brightenings
- Ellerman bombs
- Other brightenings in UV/EUV/ H alpha
4Canceling Magnetic Features
5Canceling Magnetic Feature
From Chae, Moon, Park 2003, JKAS 36, S13
6CMF as a CMR event
Corona
UPFLOW
Chromosphere
DOWNFLOW
Photosphere
Interior
FLUX CANCELLATION
CONVERGING MOTION
7Does the flux submerge in CMFs?
- YES! The ASP observations produced the evidence
for it.
From Chae, Moon, Pevtsov 2004, ApJL, 602, L65
8Observables of CMF
- Rate of Magnetic Flux Loss
- Half length of interface between two poles
- Specific flux loss rate
- Converging speed of each pole toward PIL
From Chae, Moon, Park 2003, JKAS 36, S13
9Summary of CMF Observations
Chae et al. 2002 Case A Chae et al. 2002 Case B Chae et al. 2003 Chae et al. 1998
Flux loss rate Mx/h 3.4 x 1018 2.5 x 1018 1.8x1018 2x1017
Contact length Mm 7.8 3.3 2.5 3
Specific flux loss rate G cm/s 1.2 x 106 1.1x106 2.0x106 2x105
Converging speed km/s 0.27 0.35 0.22
10Chromospheric Jets in Active Regions
From Chae, J. 2003, ApJ 584, 1084
11Ha Jets in the same active region
Chae, J. et al. 2000, Solar Physics 195, 333
12EUV/Ha Jets in another AR
From Chae et al. 1999 ApJ 513, L75
13Jet-like features in the quiet Sun
From Chae et al. 1998, ApJ, 504, L123
14Jet-like in the quiet Sun
From Chae et al. 1998, ApJ, 479, L109
15Summary of Jet Observations
- Jet-like features occur in strong association
with canceling magnetic features. - There is a good correlation between speed and
temperature in jet-like features. - Jet-like features with different temperatures
often occur together at the same place.
16Theoretical Considerations of Chromospheric
Reconnection
- Adiabatic Current Sheet of Sweet-Parker type
- Insights on Chromospheric Reconnection from
Observations of Jet-like Features - Insights on Chromospheric Reconnection from
Observations of Canceling Magnetic Features
17Adiabatic Current Sheet Model of Sweet-Parker
type
18Current Sheet Model of CMR
19Steady-state Current Sheet Model
- Sweet-Parker Model
- Incompressible flow
- Litvinenko (1999)
- Compressible, isothermal flow
- Chae et al. (2003)
- Adiabatic flow
- A generalized approach
20Steady-state Equations
- Induction equation
- Mass conservation
- Momentum conservation
- Adiabatic energy equation
21Solutions
- Basic assumptions
- Density compression factor
- Outflow speed
- Temperature Excess -outflow speed relation
22Insights on Chromospheric Reconnection from
Observations of Jet-like Features
23Are observed jet-like features chromospheric
reconnection jets?
- Temperature excess-outflow speed relation
- Ha jets
- UV Explosive events in the quiet Sun
- EUV Jets
24Are observed jet-like features chromospheric
reconnection jets?
- Yes, very likely as seen from the
temperature-speed relation. - Hotter jets are better explained with a smaller
value of g ( closer to isothermal process ) - g 4/3 fairly well explains the observed
temperature-speed relations in jet-like features.
25Are Ellerman bombs chromospheric reconnection
events?
- Ellerman bombs Brightening in the far wing of H
alpha line profile ? Heating events in the low
chromosphere DT2000 K - They may be reconnection events. If so, we have
a prediction -
- It would be important to measure the flow
associated with Ellerman bombs. - Note Shimizu et al. 2005 Extremely red-shifted
magnetic features as high as 10 km/s
26What determines jet temperatures?
- Temperature excess ? Outflow speed ? Alfven speed
of inflowing region ? magnetic field strength and
density ? Atmospheric level - The temperature and speed of reconnection jets
strongly depend on the atmospheric level where
reconnection occurs. - Higher Atmospheric level ? Lower density ? Higher
Alfven speed ? Higher outflow speed ? Hotter jets
27What determines the degree of compression?
- Specific heat ratio ? the efficiency of radiative
cooling - g 1 restores the Litvinenkos (1999) result.
This is an unrealistic assumption. - In general , 1 (isothermal) ltg lt5/3 (adiabatic)
- It is likely that g gets bigger with higher
levels where the medium is more transparent. - Plasma beta of inflow
- restores the incompressible flow
assumption of the original Sweet-Parker model - In practice, this assumption is hard to achieve
in solar atmosphere, and hence unrealistic.
28What determines the degree of compression?
- Near the photosphere
- In the upper chromosphere
-
29Insights on Chromospheric Reconnection from
Observations of Canceling Magnetic Features
30Linking observed parameters of CMF and physical
parameters of CMF
31Do CMFs result from reconnection in the
temperature minimum?
- Sturrock (1999) and Litvinenko (1999) ? YES
- We have to say NOT necessarily.
- The speed of reconnection using classical
conductivity of the inflow region is too slow to
explain the observed converging speed in
canceling magnetic features. - The resistivity of the current sheet should be
much bigger than that of inflowing region. ?
anomalous resistivity - The molecular resistivity of the inflowing region
is no longer the most important parameter
characterizing chromospheric reconnection. -
32Observational constraints on q
- Too small values of q yield too low inflow speeds
and too high outflow speeds - Too big values of q yield too high inflow speeds
and too low inflow speeds - The observed inflow speeds and outflow speeds
constrains the anomalous resistivity factor q
33A reference model
34Is there any preferred height for chromospheric
magnetic reconnection?
- No!
- Classical resistivity is not the major factor.
- Reconnection may occur at any height.
- It may be the geometry of two interacting flux
systems that determines the reconnection height.
35What we have learned so far
- Canceling magnetic features, Ha jets, UV
explosive events, EUV jets are nicely fit into
the picture of chromospheric reconnection. - An adiabatic current sheet with anomalous
resistivity factor of about 50 and specific
ratio of 4/3 may serve as a reference model for
chromospheric reconection. - There may be no preferred height of chromospheric
reconnection, and it may be the geometry of two
interacting flux systems that determines the
reconnection height.
36Observational Challenges of Solar-B
- Fine-scale structure of canceling magnetic
features ? new and more reliable measurements of
specific cancellation rates and converging speeds
(SOT) - Discovery of reconnection outflows in the low
chromosphere v10 km/s, DT103 K (SOT) - Simultaneous observations of canceling magnetic
features, low chromosphere reconnection flows, H
alpha flows, UV jets, EUV jets, X-ray jets that
cover diverse speeds, temperatures and
atmospheric levels (SOT, EIS, XRT)
37Theoretical Challenges
- Impulsive, recurrent (often bursty) occurrence
(Chae et al. 1998a, b) - existence of elementary non-steady reconnection
events ? - formation of a number of magnetic islands via
tearing instability? - Co-occurrence of hot jets and cool jets (Chae
etal. 1998b, 1999) - Two step reconnection (formation of magnetic
islands in the lower atmosphere followed by its
destruction in the upper atmosphere, Chae 1999)? - Multi-site reconnection of many thin shredded
flux sheets at different atmospheric heights (in
a stratified medium)?