How Nanoflares Produce Kinetic Waves, Nano-Type III Radio Bursts, and Non-Thermal Electrons in the Solar Wind

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Abstract

Observations of the solar corona and the solar wind discover that the solar wind is unsteady and originates from the impulsive events near the surface of the Sun's atmosphere. How solar coronal activities affect the properties of the solar wind is a fundamental issue in heliophysics. We report a simulation and theoretical investigation of how nanoflare accelerated electron beams affect the kinetic-scale properties of the solar wind and generate coherent radio emission. We show that nanoflare-accelerated electron beams can trigger a nonlinear electron two stream instability, which generates kinetic Alfvén and whistler waves, as well as a non-Maxwellian electron velocity distribution function, consistent with observations of the solar wind. The plasma coherent emission produced in our model agrees well with the observations of Type III, J and V solar radio bursts. Open questions in the kinetic solar wind model are also discussed.

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Che, H. (2018). How Nanoflares Produce Kinetic Waves, Nano-Type III Radio Bursts, and Non-Thermal Electrons in the Solar Wind. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 1100). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1100/1/012005

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