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Particle Acceleration in Solar Flares. Siming Liu Purple Mountain Observatory liusm@pmo.ac.cn 025-83332173. Outline. General Issues of Particle Acceleration Heliosphere Energetic Particles and Flares Conclusions. General Issues of Particle Acceleration.
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Particle Acceleration in Solar Flares Siming Liu Purple Mountain Observatory liusm@pmo.ac.cn 025-83332173
Outline General Issues of Particle Acceleration Heliosphere Energetic Particles and Flares Conclusions
General Issues of Particle Acceleration 1: How high can the particle energy be? 2: How fast can particlesbe accelerated? 3: What causes the spectral breaks? 4: What determines the spectral index? 5: What determines the acceleration efficiency (flux)? 6: To what extent can we predict properties of accelerated particles?
1: Hillas Diagram: Maximum Energy How can the particle energy be so high? ~qBL q: charge B: magnetic field L: size Confined by B: Gyro-radius Rg=E/qB<L Maximum potential difference: ~B L
2: Acceleration Timescale How fast can particles be accelerated? Electric field seen by high energy test particles: E =V x B Momentum gain rate: ṗ = q E ~ qVB Acceleration time: p/ṗ ~ Rg/V
3: What causes spectral breaks? 2.7 Galactic 2.0 Solar ExtraGalactic
4: What determines the spectral index? Power law distribution may just indicate a lack of distinct scales in the Heliosphere. But why does the distribution converge to an index of 2? A highly dynamical process of particle acceleration, transport and energetic particle coupling with background plasma and waves!? Is the index of 2 universal? If not, what determines its value?
5: Energy Partition between thermal and nonthermal components is observationally poorly constrained and theoretically not well defined
6: Solar Flares Intermittency of Acceleration Hot Plasma EUV Image Energetic Particles X-ray Light curves Bremsstrahlung and Hadronic Processes Lin et al. 2003
Conclusions Power-law distribution of energetic particles origins from complex multi-scale systems. The broad smooth distribution in energy is intimately connected to the lack of distinct time and spatial scales in the relevant acceleration processes. Identification of prominent features from observations plays important roles in advancing our understanding of these complex systems. (Not easy, Keep trying!!!)
Low-Energy: Gradual Thermal Coronal Source High-Energy: Impulsive Non-thermal Chromospheric Footpoints Lin et al. 2003
A Simple Flare LIGHT CURVE: A simple classical flare with an impulsive hard X-ray pulse leading gradual evolution in soft X-rays
Count Spectral Evolution Rise Decay
Forward Fitting to Spectra Thermal Rise Rise
Generic Particle Distribution in Turbulent Plasmas Thermal Emission Balance between Collision and Acceleration Balance between Diffusive Acceleration and Frictional Energy Loss or Escape Samples of Particle Distribution Function Emissions by Energetic Particles Liu et al. 2009, 2010
A Case Study Thermal Decay Preheating Acceleration
Parameters Nonthermal Preheating Thermal Decay 3 X2 47 Log EM 44 5keV T 1keV Eb 20keV γ 4
Solar Flares Masuda et al.1994
Injection and Trapping Model for High-Energy Emission Aschwanden et al.1996, 1998
Intermittency in Time Aschwanden et al.1996, 1998
5: Heliospheric Energetic Particles 1AU 100AU
4: What determines the Spectral index and flux?! 2.7 2.0
Fermi Acceleration 1984
Fermi Acceleration 1988 Stochastic Diffusive Shock
Levy Flights Impulsive Energy Gain Statistical properties of current sheet determine the particle distribution!