The Energy Balance of Plasmoids in the Solar Atmosphere
Abstract
The properties of an isolated magnetized plasmoid in a nonuniform magnetic field such as arises in stellar atmospheres are studied. The work of Pneuman and Cargill (1985) on the so-called melon-seed effect is extended to include an equation describing the energy balance, so giving a unified picture of the shape, motion, and energetics of the plasmoid. Three treatments of plasmoid energy balance are considered: (1) a polytropic law, (P = about N to the gamma); (2) one in which the plasmoid cools radiatively; and (3) one in which a heating function proportional to the local density balances the radiation. For a gamma = 4/3 polytrope the evolution is self-similar, so that the plasmoid maintains its shape as it moves out from the stellar surface. If gamma is less than 4/3, the final shape is a long thin cigar-shaped body, whereas if gamma is greater than or equal to 4/3, it ultimately becomes self-similar. In cases with radiation and also with heating, the ultimate shape of the plasmoid is determined by whether its gas or magnetic pressure dominate. The former is equivalent to the gamma-less-than-4/3 polytrope, and the latter to the gamma-greater-than-4/3 one. If radiation alone is present, the plasmoid cools rapidly and subsequently evolves self-similarly. If heating balances radiation initially, then the plasmoid heats up as it moves out, but, if the ratio of the transit of time of Alfven waves across it is much less than the radiative cooling time, it ultimately evolves as a gamma = 5/3 polytrope. In each case the plasmoid can be ejected to large distances (several radii) in a stellar atmosphere, for a reasonable choice of surface parameters.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- August 1986
- DOI:
- 10.1086/164468
- Bibcode:
- 1986ApJ...307..820C
- Keywords:
-
- Energy Budgets;
- Magnetohydrodynamics;
- Solar Atmosphere;
- Nonisothermal Processes;
- Nonuniform Magnetic Fields;
- Prolate Spheroids;
- Radiative Heat Transfer;
- Solar Magnetic Field;
- Solar Physics;
- HYDROMAGNETICS;
- PLASMAS;
- SUN: ATMOSPHERE