Top Banner
Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center for Astrophysics
20

Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Dec 15, 2015

Download

Documents

Hayden Darcey
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Coronal Responses to Explosive Events

Adria C. Updike

Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center for Astrophysics

Page 2: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.
Page 3: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

MDI photosphere

T = 5800 K

EIT 304 Å

T = 60000 – 80000 K

EIT 195Å

T = 1.5 million K

EIT 171Å

T = 1 million K

Page 4: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Coronal Heating

insert graphic from mariska book

Page 5: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Coronal Heating

Solar Surface = 5800 K

Chromosphere = 25000 K

Transition Region

Corona = 106 K

Ruled out:

Radiation

Convection

Page 6: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Coronal Heating

Insert magnetic reconnection graphic

Explosive Events 1024 to 1027 ergs

~2,000 km

Large Solar Flares 1028 to 1032 ergs

~10 Mm

This image of coronal loops over the eastern limb of the Sun was taken in the TRACE 171 Å pass band, characteristic of plasma at 1 MK, on November 6, 1999, at 02:30 UT. The image was rotated over +90 degrees.

www.nasa.gov

Page 7: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Explosive Events

1024 to 1027 ergs

~2,000 km

occur in Transition Region at 100,000 K

heated to coronal temperatures?

Page 8: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

TRACE

Transition Region and Coronal Explorer

Observes

171 Å, 195 Å,

284 Å, 1600 Å,

1550 Å, and 1216 Å.

Page 9: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

images taken May 13, 1999

1600 Å

171 Å

near temperature minimum

104 K

near temperature maximum

106 K

Page 10: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

SUMER

Solar Ultraviolet Measurements of Emitted Radiation

Insert SUMER spectra from movie

Observed in the C IV line at 1548 Å and in the Ne VIII line at 1540 Å.

Data set from May 13, 1999 from 13:1:14.47 UT to 13:33:6.0 UT

Page 11: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Insert SUMER spectra

Page 12: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Selection Criteriaprofiles with greater than 500 counts

average width of C IV profile = 3.3 pixels2 ± 0.4 pixels2

average width of Ne VIII profile = 4.0 pixels2 ± 0.5 pixels2

A statistically significant event has greater than 500 counts and is 3 σ above either average skewness or average width.

Number of Events C IV Ne VIIIchosen 1724 274

greater than 3 δ width 322 94

greater than 3 δ skew 1718 274

with positive skew 781 80

with negative skew 937 335

Page 13: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

TRACE movie

The line moving across the TRACE images marks the position of the SUMER slit at the displayed time. The time is the difference in the SUMER slit time and the time of the first TRACE image.

Page 14: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

C IV contour map

High skewness in green, high width in red. Created by smoothing over original contour maps. Areas of SUMER events plotted on TRACE images. Areas of high skewness tend to follow the coronal loop, while the high width is concentrated at the foot points.

Page 15: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Ne VIII contour map

The high skewness is represented by light blue, and the high width is yellow. The Ne VIII follows the magnetic foot points more closely than the C IV map did.

Page 16: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Light Curves

We selected a small contoured area from the figure below and averaged the number of counts in this area as a function of time.

Area one: x1 = 329 x2 = 331 y1 = 139 y2 = 140

Area two: x1 = 305 x2 = 308 y1 = 137 y2 = 140

Area three: x1 = 310 x2 = 312 y1 = 58 y2 = 60

Area four: x1 = 280 x2 = 282 y1 = 70 y2 = 72

Page 17: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Light Curves

Four light curves from TRACE 171 Å data, May 13, 1999. DN/s. The error is DN/sqrt(11).

Page 18: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Light Curves

To quantify our results, we compared the maximum short term (<5 min) fluctuation in TRACE pixels above event regions to “normal” fluctuations observed over areas that did not show explosive event characteristics during the SUMER scan.

The fluctuation is defined as the difference between the minimum and maximum points on the light curve.

Page 19: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

Global Birthrate

slit

sun o

A

A NR

number of new events

occurring each second

No = number of observed events

τ = total observation time

Asun = surface area of the sun that can be considered an active region

Aslit = deprojected area of SUMER slit on sun

C IV 2108 events s-1

Ne VIII 335 events s-1

Previous Results:

753 events s-1 (Brueckner and Bartoe)

600 events s-1 (Dere, Brueckner and Bartoe)

Page 20: Coronal Responses to Explosive Events Adria C. Updike Smith College / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Amy Winebarger and Kathy Reeves, Center.

ConclusionsWe found that the typical fluctuation for both events and non-events is ~ 1.5 DN/s. However, while the non-events became nearly non-existant after a fluctuation of 2.5 DN/s, the events continued out to more than 20 DN/s.

This indicates a great amount of activity taking place in the regions identified as events. By constraining our time scale to 5 minutes, we determined that 35% of our events had greater than 3 σ above non-events.

We witnessed a coronal response in TRACE to an explosive event in SUMER 35% of the time.

Explosive events can contribute 10% of the energy required to heat the solar corona.

It is not clear whether the explosive events are directly related to the coronal response, or if they are both separate responses to reconnection.