Sun-as-a-star Analysis of Hα Spectra of a Solar Flare Observed by SMART/SDDI: Time Evolution of Red Asymmetry and Line Broadening
Abstract
Stellar flares sometimes show red/blue asymmetries of the Hα line, which can indicate chromospheric dynamics and prominence activations. However, the origin of asymmetries is not completely understood. For a deeper understanding of stellar data, we performed a Sun-as-a-star analysis of Hα line profiles of an M4.2-class solar flare showing dominant emissions from flare ribbons by using the data of the Solar Dynamics Doppler Imager on board the Solar Magnetic Activity Research Telescope at the Hida Observatory. Sun-as-a-star Hα spectra of the flare show red asymmetry of up to ~95 km s-1 and line broadening of up to ~7.5 Å. The Sun-as-a-star Hα profiles are consistent with spectra from flare regions with weak intensity, but they take smaller redshift velocities and line widths by a factor of ~2 than those with strong intensity. The redshift velocities, as well as line widths, peak out and decay more rapidly than the Hα equivalent widths, which is consistent with the chromospheric condensation model and spatially resolved flare spectra. This suggests that as a result of superposition, the nature of chromospheric condensation is observable even from stellar flare spectra. The time evolution of redshift velocities is found to be similar to that of luminosities of near-ultraviolet rays (1600 Å), while the time evolution of line broadening is similar to that of optical white lights. These Hα spectral behaviors in Sun-as-a-star view could be helpful to distinguish whether the origin of Hα red asymmetry of stellar flares is a flare ribbon or other phenomena.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- July 2022
- DOI:
- 10.3847/1538-4357/ac75cd
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2206.01395
- Bibcode:
- 2022ApJ...933..209N
- Keywords:
-
- Solar flares;
- Solar flare spectra;
- Flare stars;
- Stellar flares;
- Optical flares;
- 1496;
- 1982;
- 540;
- 1603;
- 1166;
- Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 18 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal