Recent observations from the Hinode and Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft have provided major advances in understanding the heating of solar active regions (ARs). For ARs comprising many magnetic strands or sub-loops heated by small, impulsive events (nanoflares), it is suggested that (i) the time between individual nanoflares in a magnetic strand is 500-2000 s, (ii) a weak 'hot' component (more than 106.6 K) is present, and (iii) nanoflare energies may be as low as a few 1023 ergs. These imply small heating events in a stressed coronal magnetic field, where the time between individual nanoflares on a strand is of order the cooling time. Modelling suggests that the observed properties are incompatible with nanoflare models that require long energy build-up (over 10 s of thousands of seconds) and with steady heating.
CITATION STYLE
Cargill, P. J., Warren, H. P., & Bradshaw, S. J. (2015, May 28). Modelling nanoflares in active regions and implications for coronal heating mechanisms. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. Royal Society of London. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2014.0260
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