Bright Hot Impacts by Erupted Fragments Falling Back on the Sun: A Template for Stellar Accretion
Abstract
Impacts of falling fragments observed after the eruption of a filament in a solar flare on 7 June 2011 are similar to those inferred for accretion flows on young stellar objects. As imaged in the ultraviolet (UV)-extreme UV range by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory, many impacts of dark, dense matter display uncommonly intense, compact brightenings. High-resolution hydrodynamic simulations show that such bright spots, with plasma temperatures increasing from ~104 to ~106 kelvin, occur when high-density plasma (>>1010 particles per cubic centimeter) hits the solar surface at several hundred kilometers per second, producing high-energy emission as in stellar accretion. The high-energy emission comes from the original fragment material and is heavily absorbed by optically thick plasma, possibly explaining the lower mass accretion rates inferred from x-rays relative to UV-optical-near infrared observations of young stars.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- July 2013
- DOI:
- 10.1126/science.1235692
- Bibcode:
- 2013Sci...341..251R
- Keywords:
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- ASTRONOMY Materials-Science, Astronomy, Physics