Title: Active-region magnetic structures and their perturbations by flares
1 Active-region magnetic structures and their
perturbations by flares
2Outline
- Description of a solar active region
- Magnetic structure
- Waves, oscillations, and restructuring
- RHESSI observations of eruptive flares
3TRACE 171A view of an active region, courtesy
LMSAL cool stars Web material
4Mechanical properties of an active region in the
corona
- Flares and CMEs are magnetically driven,
according to consensus, from energy stored in the
corona - In such conditions, (low plasma b), the
mechanical stresses can be represented as a
pressure and a tension - Dissipation is normally slow
- The volume is electrically equipotential except
for the Rosseland-Pannekoek potential
5CH
G. A. Gary, Solar Phys. 203, 71 (2001)
6What are the loops?
- The loops show the direction of the magnetic
field - The X-ray visibility of the corona is a monotonic
increasing function of the gas pressure - In an active region, the loop dimensions are
typically smaller than the scale height - The footpoints of a loop lie in a transition
layer at the appropriate pressure - The magnetic field must be slightly depressed in
the visible loops
7Lundquist et al., SPD 2004
8NOAA 10486, Haleakala IVM data, B cube
Scaled
Not scaled
Roumeliotis-Wheatland-McTiernan method pixel size
3000 km
9AR8210 courtesy J. McTiernan
10Conjecture Most of the free energy in an
active region is concentrated very near its base
11The normal state of the active-region corona is
an equilibrium
- An equilibrium system will oscillate around its
rest configuration if perturbed slightly - We observe coronal oscillations via spectroscopy,
photometry, and in movies - The oscillations have small amplitudes and can be
studied via MHD theory
12Kink-mode oscillations
- Flare waves associated with metric type II bursts
often (12/30 cases) appear with TRACE loop
oscillations - These oscillations allow us to study the
equilibrium state of the non-erupting part of the
corona
13Aschwanden et al., Solar Phys. 206, 99 (2002)
14Narukage et al., PASJ 56, L5 (2004)
15SUMERs oscillations
Wang, T. J. et al., ApJ 574, L101 (2003)
16Yohkohs oscillations (BCS)
Mariska, J. et al., SPD poster (2004)
17Schrijver et al., Solar Phys. 206, 69, 2002
18Three things the movie showed
- Early inward motions, prior to the eruption
- Dimming - the CME starting off
- Excitation of coupled normal modes in the arcade
- (arcade blowout)
19SXT observations of the blow-out of an X-ray
loop prominence system
20Studying coronal equilibria
- On large scales the corona tends be stable
- We can study the equilibrium states via the
oscillations there are several modalities - Propose to use instrumented hammer approach to
characterize eigenstates - Propose to study before/after equilibrium states
using FASR and Solar-B
21H. Wang et al., ApJ 576, 497 (2002)
22Magnetic challenge Can any existing model of a
flare or CME properly describe the change in the
coronal magnetic field?
23Cartoon showing magnetic implosion
Post-event field
Pre-event field
Isomagnetobars
Limb
Hudson Cliver, JGR 106, 25,199 (2001)
24Conclusions
- Unlike the cosmologists, we dont have a standard
model for a flare/CME - we do have cartoons,
though http//solarmuri.ssl.berkeley.edu/hhudson
/cartoons/
25Serious conclusions
Extrapolation techniques to learn about the
coronal magnetic field are inherently
flawed It will be better in the future to
assimilate more precise methods, such as -
TRACE coronal imagery (direction of B) - FASR
gyroresonance surfaces (magnitude of B) -
Mechanical models (matching eigenfrequencies)
26From the Flare/CME Cartoon Archive http//solarmur
i.ssl.berkeley.edu/hhudson/cartoons/
27Anzer-Pneuman, 1982
Null?
Separatrices?
28Forbes, T., JGR 105, 23,153, 2000
Gallagher, P. personal communication 2004
29(No Transcript)
30RHESSI observations of early inward motions
31Sui et al., 2004
32Sui et al., 2004