Title: A Model of the Chromosphere: Heating, Structures, and Convection
1A Model of the Chromosphere Heating, Structures,
and Convection
- P. Song1, and V. M. Vasyliunas1,2
- Center for Atmospheric Research and Department of
Environmental, Earth Atmospheric Sciences,
University of Massachusetts Lowell - 2. Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung,3
7191 Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany
2Abstract
- We propose a model of local convection in the
chromosphere, with scale size of supergranules.
The strong heating required in order to balance
the radiative losses in the chromosphere is
provided by strong damping, through
plasma-neutral collisions, of Alfvén waves that
are driven by motions below the photosphere. On
the basis of a self-consistent plasma-neutral-elec
tromagnetic one-dimensional model, we derive the
vertical profile of wave spectrum and power by a
novel method, including the damping effect
neglected in previous treatments. The
high-frequency portion of the source power
spectrum is strongly damped at lower altitudes,
whereas the lower-frequency perturbations are
nearly undamped and can be observed in the corona
and above. As a result, the waves observed above
the corona constitute only a fraction of those at
the photosphere and, contrary to supposition in
some earlier Alfvén-wave-damping models, their
power does not represent the energy input.
Calculated from parameters of a semi-empirical
model for quiet-Sun conditions, the mechanism can
generate sufficient heat to account for the
radiative losses in the atmosphere, with most of
the heat deposited at lower altitudes. When the
magnetic field strength varies horizontally, the
heating is likewise horizontally nonuniform.
Since radiative loss is a strong function of
temperature, the equilibrium temperature
corresponding to local thermal balance between
heating and radiation can be reached rapidly.
Regions of stronger heating thus maintain higher
temperatures and vice versa. The resulting uneven
distribution of temperature drives chromospheric
convection and circulation, which produces a
temperature minimum in the chromosphere near 600
km altitude and distorts the magnetic field to
create a funnel-canopy-shaped magnetic geometry,
with a strong field highly concentrated into
small areas in the lower chromosphere and a
relatively uniform field in the upper
chromosphere. The formation of the transition
region, corona, and spicules will be discussed.
3Conditions in the Chromosphere
- General Comments
- Partially ionized
- Strong magnetic field
- Similar to thermosphere
- -ionosphere
- Motion is driven from below
- Heating can be via collisions between plasma and
neutrals - Objectives to explain
- Temperature profile, especially a minimum at 600
km - Sharp changes in density and temperature at the
Transition Region (TR) - Spicules rooted from strong field regions
- Funnel-canopy-shaped magnetic field geometry
Avrett and Loeser, 2008
4Radiative Losses/Required Heating
- Total radiation loss from chromosphere (not
including photosphere) 1067 erg cm-2 s-1 . - Radiative loss rate
- Lower chromosphere 10-1 erg cm-3 s-1
- Upper chromosphere 10-2 erg cm-3 s-1
- Power carried by solar wind 105 erg cm-2 s-1
- Power to ionize small compared to radiation
- Observed wave power 107 erg cm-2 s-1 .
5Plasma-neutral Interaction
VA
- Plasma (red dots) is driven with the magnetic
field (solid line) perturbation from below - Neutrals do not directly feel the perturbation
while plasma moves - Plasma-neutral collisions accelerate neutrals
(open circles) - Longer than the neutral-ion collision time, the
plasma and neutrals move nearly together with a
small slippage. Weak friction/heating - In very long time scales, the plasma and neutrals
move together no collision/no heating
6Damping as function of frequency and altitude
1000 km
200 km
Reardon et al., 2008
7Observation Range
8Total Heating Rate from a Power-Law Source
Logarithm of heating per km, Q, as function of
field strength over all frequencies in erg cm-3
s-1 assuming n5/3, ?0/2p1/300 sec and F0 107
erg cm-2 s-1.
9Heating Rate Per Particle
- Heating is stronger at
- lower altitudes for weaker field
- higher altitudes for stronger field
Logarithm of heating rate per particle Q/Ntot in
erg s-1, solid lines are for unity of ?in/?i
(upper) and ?e/?e (lower)
10Local Thermal Equilibrium Condition
- Energy Equation
- Time scale lifetime of a supergranulegt 1
day105 sec - Heat flux negligible (see next page)
- Lower chromosphere Optically thick medium
- R 10-1 erg cm-3 s-1 (Rosseland approximation)
- Q 100 erg cm-3 s-1
- Convection 100 erg cm-3 s-1 (for p105 dyn/cm2)
- If RltltQ
- Upper chromosphere Optically thin medium
- Q/NNi? 10-26 erg cm3 s-1
- Convection, r.h.s., 10-28 erg cm3 s-1
- (for NNi1011 cm-3, p10-1 dyn/cm2)
- Convection is negligible in the upper
chromosphere Q/NNi? - Convection in the lower chromosphere may be
important - Temperature T increases with increasing heating
rate per particle Q/N
11Heat Transfer via Thermal Conduction
- Perpendicular to B very small
- Parallel to B
- Thermal conductivity
- Â
- Conductive heat transfer (L1000 km, T 104 K)
- Thermal conduction is negligible within the
chromosphere the smallness of the temperature
gradient within the chromosphere and sharp change
at the TR basically rule out the significance of
heat conduction in maintaining the temperature
profile within the chromosphere. - Thermal conduction at the Transition Region
(T106 K, L100 km) - Qconduct 10-6 erg cm-3 s-1 (comparable to
greater than the heating rate) important to
provide for high rate of radiation
12Horizontal Force Balance
- Momentum equation
- Force imbalance is mitigated by sound or fast
waves - Time scales
- Sound wave 1.5x104 km/10 km/s 103 sec
- Alfven speed in the upper region 104 km/s, 100
sec - Compared with the time scales of the pressure
imbalance creation by heating (from energy
equation) - 105 sec in the lower chromosphere
- 103 sec in upper chromosphere
- Lower chromosphere horizontally pressure
balanced - Upper chromosphere pressure in higher heating
region may be higher
13Vertical Force Balance
- Momentum equation
- or
- Average over horizontal dimensions (steady state)
- Vertical acceleration
- Upward TgtTm
- Downward TltTm
- Vertical flow produces additional pressure
imbalance because of the different temperature
and density the flow carries
14Upper cell vertical flow speed estimate
- Steady state momentum equation
- Estimate the upflow in upper cell strong B region
- With sub m measured and corresponding values
- without sub strong field upper cell.
- _at_1000 km, Tm6200, from radiation function table
Nim?m2x10-27x2x1011. (From our model, Qm/Nm
10-18 since Qm cannot be used quantitatively),
assume Ni?/Nim?mNmQ/NQm - Since Q/N6Qm/Nm, ?TX6?mTmXm, where XNi/N, from
radiation function T 6600. T/Tm1.06,
T/Tm-10.06 - _at_2000 km Tm6700
- Nim?m1.2x10-26x4x1010, Q/N6Qm/Nm, T7100,
T/Tm1.06 - g274m/s2
- Vzsqrt(2x274m/s2x0.06x106m)sqrt(33x106)6 km/s,
a number within possible range, but maybe too big
if Vx is LVz/H30000/2/200Vz450km/s,
supersonic. Cs10 km/s
15Circulation Connecting the Vertical Flow with
Horizontal Flow
- Continuity equation
- 2-D Cartesian coordinates
- Horizontal momentum equation
16Inhomogeneous Heating Chromosphere Circulation
17Chromospheric Circulation Distortion of
Magnetic Field
18Conclusions
- Based on the 1-D analytical model that can
explain the chromospheric heating - The model invokes heavily damped Alfvén waves via
frictional and Ohmic heating - The damping of higher frequency waves is heavy at
lower altitudes for weaker field - Only the undamped low-frequency waves can be
observed above the corona (the chromosphere
behaves as a low-pass filter) - More heating (per particle) occurs at lower
altitudes when the field is weak and at higher
altitudes when the field is strong - Extend to 2-D when the magnetic field strength is
horizontally nonuniform - The temperature is higher in higher heating rate
regions. - The nonuniform heating drives chromospheric
convection/circulation - The observed temperature profile, including the
temperature minimum at 600 km, is consistent with
the convection/circulation without invoking
thermal conduction - Temperature minimum occurs in the place where
there is a change in heating mechanism electron
Ohmic heating below and ion frictional heating
above.
19Preprints
20Lower cell vertical flow speed estimate
- Energy Equation
- Vertical velocity