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Shock heating in numerical simulations of kink-unstable coronal loops
Author(s) -
Michael Bareford,
A. W. Hood
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
philosophical transactions of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2962
pISSN - 1364-503X
DOI - 10.1098/rsta.2014.0266
Subject(s) - physics , magnetohydrodynamics , instability , kink instability , magnetohydrodynamic drive , mechanics , magnetic field , magnetic reconnection , dissipation , coronal loop , plasma , magnetic energy , corona (planetary geology) , nanoflares , shock wave , shock (circulatory) , photosphere , classical mechanics , solar wind , coronal mass ejection , magnetization , medicine , quantum mechanics , astrobiology , venus , thermodynamics
An analysis of the importance of shock heating within coronal magnetic fields has hitherto been a neglected area of study. We present new results obtained from nonlinear magnetohydrodynamic simulations of straight coronal loops. This work shows how the energy released from the magnetic field, following an ideal instability, can be converted into thermal energy, thereby heating the solar corona. Fast dissipation of magnetic energy is necessary for coronal heating and this requirement is compatible with the time scales associated with ideal instabilities. Therefore, we choose an initial loop configuration that is susceptible to the fast-growing kink, an instability that is likely to be created by convectively driven vortices, occurring where the loop field intersects the photosphere (i.e. the loop footpoints). The large-scale deformation of the field caused by the kinking creates the conditions for the formation of strong current sheets and magnetic reconnection, which have previously been considered as sites of heating, under the assumption of an enhanced resistivity. However, our simulations indicate that slow mode shocks are the primary heating mechanism, since, as well as creating current sheets, magnetic reconnection also generates plasma flows that are faster than the slow magnetoacoustic wave speed.

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