Publication | Open Access
DETECTING NANOFLARE HEATING EVENTS IN SUBARCSECOND INTER-MOSS LOOPS USING Hi-C
68
Citations
28
References
2013
Year
EngineeringSolar ConvectionPlasma PhysicsSolar PhysicHeat Transfer ProcessCosmic PlasmaPlasma SimulationNumerical SimulationPlasma TheoryThermal AnalysisSpace PhysicThermodynamicsSolar Dynamics ObservatoryHigh-resolution Coronal ImagerSolar Plasma PhysicsPhysicsNanotechnologyThermal TransportCosmic RaySpace WeatherAstrophysicsSolar Energetic ParticleNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsHi-c ImagesAstrophysical PlasmaThermal EngineeringThermophysical Property
The High-resolution Coronal Imager (Hi-C) flew aboard a NASA sounding rocket on 2012 July 11 and captured roughly 345 s of high-spatial and temporal resolution images of the solar corona in a narrowband 193 Å channel. In this paper, we analyze a set of rapidly evolving loops that appear in an inter-moss region. We select six loops that both appear in and fade out of the Hi-C images during the short flight. From the Hi-C data, we determine the size and lifetimes of the loops and characterize whether these loops appear simultaneously along their length or first appear at one footpoint before appearing at the other. Using co-aligned, co-temporal data from multiple channels of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly on the Solar Dynamics Observatory, we determine the temperature and density of the loops. We find the loops consist of cool (∼105 K), dense (∼1010 cm−3) plasma. Their required thermal energy and their observed evolution suggest they result from impulsive heating similar in magnitude to nanoflares. Comparisons with advanced numerical simulations indicate that such dense, cold and short-lived loops are a natural consequence of impulsive magnetic energy release by reconnection of braided magnetic field at low heights in the solar atmosphere.
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