1 / 21

H α and hard X-ray observations of solar white-light flares

H α and hard X-ray observations of solar white-light flares. M. D. Ding Department of Astronomy, Nanjing University. A brief review. WLFs originate from deeper layers than ordinary flares Many examples support a relationship between WL emission and energetic electrons

keelty
Télécharger la présentation

H α and hard X-ray observations of solar white-light flares

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hαand hard X-ray observations of solar white-light flares M. D. Ding Department of Astronomy, Nanjing University

  2. A brief review • WLFs originate from deeper layers than ordinary flares • Many examples support a relationship between WL emission and energetic electrons • Heating in the lower layers in WLFs remains unsettled

  3. Previous radiation and heating mechanisms • Hydrogen recombinations (free-bound transition) in chromosphere and negative hydrogen emission in photoshphere • Heating mechanisms: electron beam(Aboudarham & Henoux 1986) proton beam(Machado et al. 1978) soft-X-ray irradiation(Henoux & Nakagawa 1977) EUV irradiation (Poland et al. 1988) Alfvén wave dissipation (Emslie & Sturrock 1982) Backwarming (Machado et al. 1989)

  4. Electron beam+Backwarming(Ding et al. 2003)

  5. Example I • The X10 WLF of 2003 October 29 (S15 W02) by BBSO at 1.56 μm (Xu et al. 2004) • Blue: RHESSI HXR 50-100 keV Red: NIR continuum

  6. Example II • The X5.3 WLF of 2001 August 25 (S17 E34) observed by TRACE (Metcalf et al. 2003) • Gray images: TRACE WL White contours: YOHKOH HXR at 33-53 keV

  7. There are, however, examples showing the WL and HXR kernels are not cospatial • The X2.2 WLF of 1991 December 3 (N17 E72) observed by YOHKOH (Sylwester & Sylwester 2000) • Gray images: WL Solid contours: HXR 33-53 keV

  8. Multi-wavelength observations of white-light flare • The M2.6/2B WLF of 2002 September 29 (N12 E21) • The M2.1/1B WLF of 2002 September 30 (N13 E10) • Simultaneously observed by the imaging spectrograph of the Solar Tower of NanjingUniversity and by RHESSI

  9. The 2002 September 29 WLF A • Black contours: 15-50 keV HXR (06:36:00—06:36:30 UT) • White contours: WL emission (06:36:16 UT) • White-dashed line: MDI magnetic neutral line B

  10. General features • The RHESSI images resolve two conjugate footpoints (A and B) • The continuum emission and the HXR emission are basically cospatial • The magnitude of continuum emission is not simply related to the electron beam flux

  11. A • RHESSI HXR images showing that FP A is harder than B B

  12. Power-law fitting of the HXR spectra for kernels A and B A B

  13. Comparison of Kernels A and B

  14. Continuum Contrast

  15. FP A: higher coronal pressure • FP B: lower coronal pressure

  16. The 2002 September 30 WLF • Black contours: 12-25 keV HXR • White contours: WL emission • White-dashed line: MDI magnetic neutral line

  17. Motion of the flare footpoint in the continuum White-light & 12-25 keV HXR

  18. Conclusions • The WLF is basically consistent with the electron beam heating model • First detection of a WL footpoint motion • Heating in the lower atmosphere responsible for the WL emission is achieved through backwarming • The energy flux of the electron beam derived from the HXR spectra can explain the WL enhancement • The coronal pressure is crutial to the response of the flare footpoints subject to electron beam heating

  19. Thank You!

More Related