The Effect of Hydrostatic Weighting on the Vertical Temperature Structure of the Solar Corona
Author(s) -
Markus J. Aschwanden,
N. Nitta
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the astrophysical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.376
H-Index - 489
eISSN - 1538-4357
pISSN - 0004-637X
DOI - 10.1086/312695
Subject(s) - hydrostatic equilibrium , physics , astrophysics , scale height , corona (planetary geology) , mean kinetic temperature , electron temperature , plasma , astronomy , quantum mechanics , astrobiology , venus
We investigate the effect of hydrostatic scale heights lambda(T) in coronal loops on the determination of the vertical temperature structure T&parl0;h&parr0; of the solar corona. Every method that determines an average temperature at a particular line of sight from optically thin emission (e.g., in EUV or soft X-ray wavelengths) of a mutlitemperature plasma is subject to the emission measure-weighted contributions dEM&parl0;T&parr0;&solm0;dT from different temperatures. Because most of the coronal structures (along open or closed field lines) are close to hydrostatic equilibrium, the hydrostatic temperature scale height introduces a height-dependent weighting function that causes a systematic bias in the determination of the temperature structure T&parl0;h&parr0; as function of altitude h. The net effect is that the averaged temperature seems to increase with altitude, dT&parl0;h&parr0;&solm0;dh>0, even if every coronal loop (of a multitemperature ensemble) is isothermal in itself. We simulate this effect with differential emission measure distributions observed by SERTS for an instrument with a broadband temperature filter such as Yohkoh/Soft X-Ray Telescope and find that the apparent temperature increase due to hydrostatic weighting is of order DeltaT approximately T0h&solm0;r middle dot in circle. We suggest that this effect largely explains the systematic temperature increase in the upper corona reported in recent studies (e.g., by Sturrock et al., Wheatland et al., or Priest et al.), rather than being an intrinsic signature of a coronal heating mechanism.
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