Wednesday, July 18, 2012

1207.3992 (S. Regnier)

Thermal Shielding of an Emerging Active Region    [PDF]

S. Regnier
The interaction between emerging active regions and the pre-existing coronal magnetic field is important to understand better the mechanisms of storage and release of magnetic energy from the convection zone to the high corona. We are aiming at describing the first steps of the emergence of an active region within a pre-existing quiet-Sun corona in terms of the thermal and magnetic structure. We use unprecedented spatial, temporal and spectral coverage from the Atmospheric Imager Assembly (AIA) and from the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Starting on 30 May 2010 at 17:00 UT and for 8 hours, we follow the emergence of the active region AR11076 within a quiet-Sun region. Using several SDO/AIA filters covering temperatures from 50000K to 10 MK, we show that the emerging process is characterised by a thermal shield at the interface between the emerging flux and pre-existing quiet-Sun corona. The active region 11076 can be considered as a peculiar example of emerging active region as (i) the polarities emerge in a photospheric quiet-Sun region near a supergranular-like distribution, (ii) the polarities forming the bipolar emerging structure do not rotate with respect to each other indicating a small amount of twist in the emerging flux bundle. There is a thermal shield formed at the interface between the emerging active region and the pre-existing quiet-Sun region. The thermal shielding structure deduced from all SDO/AIA channels exhibits a strong asymmetry between the two polarities of the active region suggesting that the heating mechanism for one polarity is more likely to be magnetic reconnection, whilst it is due to increasing magnetic pressure for the opposite polarity.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.3992

No comments:

Post a Comment