Fast-Shock Formation in Line-tied Magnetic Reconnection Models of Solar Flares
Abstract
In a previous study by the author, an approximately stationary fast shock was tentatively identified in a numerical experiment designed to study line-tied magnetic reconnection. Here the evidence for the occurrence of a stationary fast shock is reexamined, and the previous identification is confirmed. In the numerical experiment, line-tied reconnection is modeled by a configuration which produces two supermagnetosonic outflow jets - one directed upward, away from the photosphere, and one directed downward, toward an arcade of closed magnetic loops tied to the photosphere. The fast shock occurs when the downward-directed jet encounters the obstacle formed by the closed loops. Although the existence of a stationary, or nearly stationary, fast shock is confirmed, the transition from the supermagnetosonic flow region upstream of the shock to the nearly static region downstream of the shock is more complicated than was previously thought. Immediately downstream of the shock, there exists a deflection sheath in which the submagnetosonic flow coming out of the shock is diverted around the region of static closed loops. The MHD jump conditions are used to investigate the characteristics of the fast shock and to show that a stationary shock cannot exist unless accompanied by a deflection sheath. Analysis of the shock's location and dimensions suggests that such fast shocks may contribute to particle acceleration and to thermal condensation in flares.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- June 1986
- DOI:
- 10.1086/164268
- Bibcode:
- 1986ApJ...305..553F
- Keywords:
-
- Magnetic Field Reconnection;
- Shock Waves;
- Solar Flares;
- Solar Magnetic Field;
- Magnetohydrodynamic Flow;
- Particle Acceleration;
- Plasma Jets;
- Solar Physics;
- Stellar Models;
- Solar Physics;
- HYDROMAGNETICS;
- SHOCK WAVES;
- SUN: FLARES