We perform numerical simulations of impulsively generated magnetic swirls in an isolated flux tube that is rooted in the solar photosphere. These swirls are triggered by an initial pulse in a horizontal component of the velocity. The initial pulse is launched either (a) centrally, within the localized magnetic flux tube or (b) off-central, in the ambient medium. The evolution and dynamics of the flux tube are described by three-dimensional, ideal magnetohydrodynamic equations. These equations are numerically solved to reveal that in case (a) dipole-like swirls associated with the fast magnetoacoustic kink and m = 1 Alfvén waves are generated. In case (b), the fast magnetoacoustic kink and m = 0 Alfvén modes are excited. In both these cases, the excited fast magnetoacoustic kink and Alfvén waves consist of a similar flow pattern and magnetic shells are also generated with clockwise and counter-clockwise rotating plasma within them, which can be the proxy of dipole-shaped chromospheric swirls. The complex dynamics of vortices and wave perturbations reveals the channelling of sufficient amount of energy to fulfil energy losses in the chromosphere (~104 Wm-1) and in the corona (~102 W m-1). Some of these numerical findings are reminiscent of signatures in recent observational data.
CITATION STYLE
Murawski, K., Kayshap, P., Srivastava, A. K., Pascoe, D. J., Jelínek, P., Kúzma, B., & Fedun, V. (2018). Magnetic swirls and associated fast magnetoacoustic kink waves in a solar chromospheric flux tube. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 474(1), 77–87. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx2763
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