SPRG Seminars

April 19, 2011:

" Hard X-Rays from Solar Aurora? "

Gerhard Haerendel, MPI Garching

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In this talk I analyze the implications of an acceleration  model for solar electrons following the basic auroral mechanism. Hot plasma assembling at the loop top  during flare reconnection emits Alfvén waves which  carry electromagnetic energy towards the  chromosphere, where it is partially absorbed and  partially reflected. The absorbed fraction leads to  evaporation of chromospheric matter. Interference of  the reflected waves generates small-scale structures  in the evaporation flow. Where the transverse scales  are sufficiently narrow, currents become supercritical  and subject to anomalous resistivity and dissipation.  Field-parallel potential drops of tens of kV can thus be  generated as the main channel to convert magnetic  energy into kinetic energy of electrons and ions. The  narrow energy conversion volumes expand rapidly  transverse to and along the field lines extracting much  of the stored energy in a matter of one second. It is  postulated that thousands of such “arcs” exist  simultaneously during the impulsive flare phase.