Abstract
The results of a three-dimensional MHD simulation and data obtained using specialized spacecraft made it possible to construct an electrodynamic model of solar flares. A flare results from explosive magnetic reconnection in a current sheet above an active region, and electrons accelerated in field-aligned currents cause hard X rays on the solar surface. In this review, we considered works where the boundary and initial conditions on the photosphere were specified directly from the magnetic maps, obtained by SOHO MDI in the preflare state, in order to simulate the formation of a current sheet. A numerical solution of the complete set of MHD equations, performed using the new-generation PERESVET program, demonstrated the formation of several current sheets before a series of flares. A comparison of the observed relativistic proton spectra and the simulated proton acceleration along a magnetic field singular line made it possible to estimate the magnetic reconnection rate during a flare (~10 7 cm s -1). Great flares (of the X class) originate after an increase in the active region magnetic flux up to 10 22 Mx. © 2012 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Podgorny, A. I., & Podgorny, I. M. (2012, April). Magnetohydrodynamic simulation of a solar flare: 2. Flare model and simulation using active-region magnetic maps. Geomagnetism and Aeronomy. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0016793212020119
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