Solar Coronal Loop Heating by Cross-Field Wave Transport
Abstract
Solar coronal arches heated by turbulent ion-cyclotron waves may suffer significant cross-field transport by these waves. Nonlinear processes fix the wave-propagation speed at about a tenth of the ion thermal velocity, which seems sufficient to spread heat from a central core into a large cool surrounding cocoon. Waves heat cocoon ions both through classical ion-electron collisions and by turbulent stochastic ion motions. Plausible cocoon sizes set by wave damping are in roughly kilometers, although the wave-emitting core may be only 100 m wide. Detailed study of nonlinear stabilization and energy-deposition rates predicts that nearby regions can heat to values intermediate between the roughly electron volt foot-point temperatures and the about 100 eV core, which is heated by anomalous Ohmic losses. A volume of 100 times the core volume may be affected. This qualitative result may solve a persistent problem with current-driven coronal heating; that it affects only small volumes and provides no way to produce the extended warm structures perceptible to existing instruments.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- June 1989
- DOI:
- 10.1086/167566
- Bibcode:
- 1989ApJ...341.1082A
- Keywords:
-
- Coronal Loops;
- Electron Cyclotron Heating;
- Electrostatic Waves;
- Solar Heating;
- Ion Cyclotron Radiation;
- Resistance Heating;
- Transport Theory;
- Wave Propagation;
- Solar Physics;
- HYDROMAGNETICS;
- SUN: CORONA;
- WAVE MOTIONS