论文标题
沿冠状风扇的复发性弧形前部的观测和数值表征
Observational and numerical characterization of a recurrent arc-shaped front propagating along a coronal fan
论文作者
论文摘要
活性区域的EUV通道检测到复发性的弧形强度干扰。观察到前部是沿着扎根于黑子罩中一个小区域的冠状环束传播。以前的工作将这些强度干扰与慢慢的磁性波连接起来,从磁场沿较低的大气传播到电晕。缓慢的磁声波在局部尖速速度传播。但是,由于磁场倾向于相对于视线,测得的强度图像的传播速度通常会较小,因为它们会受到投影效应。在这里,我们旨在通过将观察到的速度与数值模型的速度进行比较来理解投影的效果。使用多波长数据,我们通过傅立叶分析来确定在太阳大气的不同高度下观察结果中存在的周期。我们从沿环路的距离函数获得的互相关时间滞后的一个环中计算出的平面速度。我们对嵌入分层气氛中的活性区域进行2D理想的MHD模拟。我们以3分钟的周期性从光球驱动慢波。合成时距离图是由冠状动脉波长的前向模式强度产生的,并计算了投影的传播速度。强度干扰显示在大气的不同高度[2-3]分钟之间的主要周期。冠状通道计算的明显传播速度表现出加速模式,随着沿环路的距离上升,值从40 km/s增加到120 km/s。从合成时距离图获得的传播速度在相似的速度范围内也表现出加速曲线。我们得出的结论是,观察结果中的加速传播是由于投影效应所致。
Recurrent, arc-shaped intensity disturbances were detected by EUV channels in an active region. The fronts were observed to propagate along a coronal loop bundle rooted in a small area within a sunspot umbra. Previous works have linked these intensity disturbances to slow magnetoacoustic waves that propagate from the lower atmosphere to the corona along the magnetic field. The slow magnetoacoustic waves propagate at the local cusp speed. However, the measured propagation speeds from the intensity images are usually smaller as they are subject to projection effects due to the inclination of the magnetic field with respect to the line-of-sight. Here, we aim to understand the effect of projection by comparing observed speeds with those from a numerical model. Using multi-wavelength data we determine the periods present in the observations at different heights of the solar atmosphere through Fourier analysis. We calculate the plane-of-sky speeds along one of the loops from the cross-correlation time lags obtained as a function of distance along the loop. We perform a 2D ideal MHD simulation of an active region embedded in a stratified atmosphere. We drive slow waves from the photosphere with a 3 minutes periodicity. Synthetic time-distance maps are generated from the forward-modelled intensities in coronal wavelengths and the projected propagation speeds are calculated. The intensity disturbances show a dominant period between [2-3] minutes at different heights of the atmosphere. The apparent propagation speeds calculated for coronal channels exhibit an accelerated pattern with values increasing from 40 to 120 km/s as the distance along the loop rises. The propagation speeds obtained from the synthetic time-distance maps also exhibit accelerated profiles within a similar range of speeds. We conclude that the accelerated propagation in our observations is due to the projection effect.