研究目的
To present a comprehensive radiative magnetohydrodynamics simulation of a solar flare capturing the process from emergence to eruption, and to explain observable diagnostics of solar flares.
研究成果
The 3D MHD model of a flaring active region presented in this paper successfully reproduces many properties of flare observations. These include the spectral distributions of X-ray emission, the high-energy tail of which is typically interpreted as originating from non-thermal particles. This model, which does not include the effects of non-thermal particles, shows that it is possible to interpret a number of observational aspects of flares as arising from thermal processes involving energy release locally in the corona, and subsequent thermal conduction and radiation.
研究不足
The model does not include the effects of non-thermal particles, and the validity of MHD does not depend on whether a plasma is thermal or not. The computation of temperature (entering heat flux and radiative loss), as well as pressure, is based on that assumption.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The simulation uses the MPS/University of Chicago Radiative MHD (MURaM) code, which treats magnetoconvection in the solar interior together with 3D radiative transfer in the photosphere. The code was extended to treat coronal physics in the form of optically thin radiative losses and field-aligned thermal conduction.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
The setup of the simulation was inspired by the observed evolution of NOAA Active Region
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
120 The simulation domain captures the top 7,500 km of the solar convection zone and the first 41,600 km of the overlying atmosphere.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
The initial setup consists of a bipolar sunspot pair, each with a magnetic flux of 3.4 × 10^21 Mx. A strongly twisted magnetic bipole with 10^21 Mx flux is emerged in proximity to one of the pre-existing sunspots.
5:4 × 10^21 Mx. A strongly twisted magnetic bipole with 10^21 Mx flux is emerged in proximity to one of the pre-existing sunspots.
Data Analysis Methods:
5. Data Analysis Methods: The observables most routinely measured and used for studying flares are X-ray fluxes in the 1.0–8.0 ? and 0.5–4.0 ? wavelength bands measured by NOAA's GOES.
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