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EGU, Vienna, Austria 20/04/2007. Current trends in coronal seismology. Valery M. Nakariakov University of Warwick United Kingdom. http://www.warwick.ac.uk/go/cfsa. Wave and oscillatory processes in the solar corona:
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EGU, Vienna, Austria 20/04/2007 Current trends in coronal seismology Valery M. Nakariakov University of Warwick United Kingdom http://www.warwick.ac.uk/go/cfsa
Wave and oscillatory processes in the solar corona: • Observational evidence of coronal oscillations (or quasi-periodic pulsations) is abundant (major contribution by SOHO,TRACE and NoRH). • Possible relevance to coronal heating and solar wind acceleration problems. • Possible role in the physics of solar flares. • Plasma diagnostics.
Seismological information • Mechanisms for (Quasi) Periodicity: • Resonance (characteristic spatial scales) • Dispersion • Nonlinearity / self-organisation Characteristic scales: 1 Mm-100 Mm, MHD speeds: Alfvén speed 1 Mm/s, sound speed 0.2 Mm/s → periods 1 s – several min - MHD waves
(MHD) coronal seismology – diagnostics of solar coronal plasmas with the use of coronal MHD waves and oscillations • Main differences with helioseismology: • Transparent medium • Usually only local diagnostics of the oscillating structures and their nearest vicinity (e.g. magnetic field in the oscillating loop (c.f. time-distance helioseismology). • Three wave modes (fast, slow magnetoacoustic and Alfven) – more constrains and more toys to play with. • C.f. MHD spectroscopy of tokamaks. • Local (various coronal structures) vs Global (AR, CH) • (Roberts et al. 1984) (Uchida 1970, Ballai 2004)
Basic theory: Dispersion relations of MHD modes of a magnetic flux tube: Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations Equilibrium Linearisation Boundary conditions Zaitsev & Stepanov, 1975- B. Roberts and colleagues, 1981-
Dispersion curves of coronal loop: • Main MHD modes of coronal structures: • sausage (|B|, r) • kink(almost incompressible) • torsional (incompressible) • acoustic (r, V) • ballooning (|B|, r)
Kink oscillations of coronal loops (Aschwanden et al. 1999, Nakariakov et al. 1999) • Propagating longitudinal waves in polar plumes and near loop footpoints (De Forest & Gurman, 1998; Berghmans & Clette, 1999) • Standing longitudinal waves in coronal loops (Kliem at al. 2002; Wang & Ofman 2002) • Global sausage mode (Nakariakov et al. 2003) • Propagating fast wave trains. (Williams et al. 2001, 2002; Cooper et al. 2003; Katsiyannis et al. 2003; Nakariakov et al. 2004, Verwichte et al. 2005) Observed wave phenomena (to April 2007):
1. Transverse (kink or m=1) mode: • Decaying kink-like oscillations of coronal loops, excited by anearby flare. • Periods are several minutes (e.g. 256 s), different for differentloops. • Decay times are about a few wave periods.
Estimation of the magnetic field: One of the aims of SDO/AIA
Challenges: • to minimise the errors • automated detection of oscillations in imaging data cubes Recent achievements: (Van Doorsselaere et al. 2007)
Higher spatial harmonics: apex footpoints Verwichte et al. 2004 along loop
A number of theoretical papers on P2/P1 ratio: • Andries et al. (2005) • McEwan et al. (2006) • Dymova et al. (2007) • Estimation of • density scale height • flux tube divergence
Van Doorsselaere et al. 2007 : The hydrostatic estimation: H = 50 Mm (c.f. Aschwanden et al. 2000: “over-dense loops”)
Mechanism responsible for the decay? enhanced shear viscosity (or shear viscosity = bulk viscosity), phase mixing? dissipationless resonant absorption? Intensive discussion: VS But… Hmmm…
Open questions: • Excitation mechanism. Options are: a flare-generated coronal blast (fast) wave; a chromospheric wave exciting loop footpoints. • Decay mechanisms.Options are: resonant absorption, phase mixing with enhanced sheer viscosity; possibly leakage in the corona in multi-thread systems. • Selectivity of the excitation: why some loops respond to the excitation while others do not? • The role of nonlinear effects(the displacement is greater than the loop width). Do the oscillations change the loop cross-section shape? • Coupling of oscillations of neighbouring loops, oscillations of AR. • Spectral information is crucial (EIS).
2. Propagating Longitudinal Waves = Slow Waves Observed near in legs of loops and in plumes: • Upwardly propagating perturbations of EUV emission intensity. • With constant speed about 25-165 km/s. • Amplitude is <12% in intensity (< 6% in density), • The periods are about 130-600 s. • No manifestation of downward propagation. • A number of examples. • No correlation between the amplitudes, periods andspeeds. From King et al. 2003
stratification nonlinearity dissipation radiative losses - heating Theory: the evolutionary equation: Theory VS Observations:
Main mechanisms affecting the vertical dependence of the amplitude: • Stratification (can be estimated, relative density change is needed), • Thermal conduction (can be estimated if temperature is known), • Magnetic flux tube divergence (can be estimated from images) • Radiative damping (can be estimated if temperature is known, e.g. RTV approximation), • Unknown coronal heating function. • - can be estimated from the observations of the waves!
Multi-wavelength observations: TRACE 171 A and 195 A: Decorrelation King et al. 2004 Multi-strand sub-resolution structuring?
A probe of the sub-resolution structuring of the coronal temperature
Open questions: • What is their origin and driver? (Options: thermal overstability, leakage of p-modes, connection with running penumbra waves). • What determines the periodicity and coherency of propagating waves? • What is the physical mechanism for the abrupt disappearance of the waves at a certain height (Options: dissipation and density stratification, magnetic field divergence, phase mixing). • Are the waves connected with the running penumbra waves?
3. Similar periodicities are often detected in flares: E.g., in microwave emission: (NoRH) Period about 40 s
Often QPP are seen in both microwave (GS) and hard X-ray : e.g. Asai et al. (2001)
Also, stellar flaring QPP: EQ Peg Bflare VL emission (Mathioudakis et al. 2004) :
Suppose that QPP are connected with some MHD oscillations (the same periods!). • The model has to explain: • the modulation of both microwave and hard X-ray (and possibly WL) emission simultaneously and in phase; (are there any observations which contradict this?) • the modulation depth (> 50% in some cases, while the amplitudes of known coronal MHD waves are usually just a few percent); • the observed 2D structure of the pulsations.
A possible mechanism: periodic triggering of flare by external MHD wave MHD oscillation in the external loop (very small amplitude) Fast wave perpendicular to B approaches X-point Electric currents build up (time variant) Current driven micro-instabilities Acceleration of non-thermal electrons Anomalous resistivity Triggers fast reconnection Nakariakov et al.,Quasi-periodic modulation of solar and stellar flaring emission by magnetohydrodynamic oscillations in a nearby loop, A&A452, 343, 2006
Full 2.5D finite-βMHDsimulations of the interaction of a fast wave with a magnetic X-point (McLaughlin & Hood, 2004, 2005, 2006; Young et al. 2006): • The fast wave experiences refraction. • The fast wave energy is accumulated near the separatrix. • The current density near the X-point experiences building up. • Incoming periodicity is reflected in current periodicity. • The amplitude of the generated variations of current density is orders of magnitude higher than the amplitude of the driving fast wave.
Thus, the electric current density at the null-point varies periodically in time: The amplitude of the source fast wave is just 1%.
Current-driven plasma microinstabilities were suggested as a triggering mechanism for fast reconnection (e.g. Ugai, Shibata): Periodic variation of the current density causes periodic triggering of fast reconnection
There is some observational evidence: (Foullon et al., X-ray quasi-periodic pulsations in solar flares as MHD oscillations, A&A 420, L59, 2005) Unseen kink oscillations of the faint trans-equatorial EUV loop cause modulation of the hard X-ray emission near the magnetically conjugate points.
Conclusions: • MHD waves are a common feature of the solar corona. • The waves contain information about physical parameters in the corona (sometimes unique) – MHD coronal seismology. • If understood in the solar corona – very interesting perspectives in stellar coronae. • Several MHD modes have been directly observed in solar coronal structures, mainly in EUV. • Very interesting perspectives in the microwave band. • Flaring QPP can be cause by MHD waves too – there are simple mechanisms for the modulation of hard X-ray and microwave. • Nakariakov & Verwichte, Living Reviews of Solar Physics, 2005, http://www.livingreviews.org/lrsp-2005-3