A possible coronal magnetic flare precursor

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|first_author = Enrico LANDI  
|first_author = Enrico LANDI  
|publish_date =  January 16,  2023
|publish_date =  January 16,  2023
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|next_nugget = Hard X-ray pulsations
|previous_nugget = {{#ask: [[Category:Nugget]] [[RHESSI Nugget Index::441]]}}
|previous_nugget = {{#ask: [[Category:Nugget]] [[RHESSI Nugget Index::441]]}}
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Latest revision as of 11:10, 14 February 2023


Nugget
Number: 442
1st Author: Enrico LANDI
2nd Author:
Published: January 16, 2023
Next Nugget: Hard X-ray pulsations
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Contents

Introduction

Flares are one of the major manifestations of solar activity, and result in the emission of large quantities of high energy radiation (X-rays, EUV) which have multiple consequences. In fact, such radiation alters the Earths ionosphere, thus disrupting communication systems, can affect the trajectories of satellites, and poses a serious threat to the health of astronauts. In order to minimize such effects, it is necessary to predict the occurrence of a flare. Several methods have been proposed: those based on observations have relied on precursor events involving one or more properties of active regions, and more recently machine-learning algorithms have been developed utilizing long series of observations. However, we still have not found an unambiguous feature that can be used to predict the imminent explosion of a flare.

Flares are believed to be due to magnetic reconnection, whereby magnetic field lines of opposite polarity squeeze together and reconfigure, releasing a large amount of energy as thermal energy and radiation. This reconnection is expected to occur in the solar corona. Thus, it is only natural to expect that the coronal magnetic field would show some precursor feature that allows flare forecasting. However, measurements of coronal magnetic fields are scarce and very difficult to make, so that we do not have systematic measurements of the main actor in flare events.

A new diagnostic tool

Recently, a brand-new diagnostic technique has been developed to measure the magnetic field strength using the intensity ratios of a few lines of Fe X (higly ionized iron nuclei, formed at about 1 MK) observed by the Hinode/EIS spectrometer (Ref. [1]). This technique utilizes the magnetic sensitivity of an Fe X spectral line to measure the magnetic field strength in the 1 MK corona, and allows for the continuous monitoring of active regions to study whether coronal magnetic fields show any precursor activity prior to a flare. Plasma at such a temperature is present in every active region.

Ref. [2] applied this technique to active region 10969 on 24 August 2007, using scans by the EIS spectrograph at a 22-min cadence. A GOES C2.0 flare (SOL2007-08-24T07:52) erupted during the fourth scan (Figure 1), and lasted only a few minutes. Thus the evolution of the coronal magnetic field could be monitored for almost an hour before and after the event. Averaging the intensity of spectral lines along the spectrometer's slit revealed that the solar flare hae erupted at a location where a large "Magnetic Field Enhancement" (MFE) took place, in which the magnetic field strength reached almost 500 G (Figure 2).

Figure 1: Image of the flare in AR 10969 made using the intensities of ions formed at different temperatures: Fe X (1.1 MK), Fe XVI (2.7 MK), Fe XXIV (18 MK), as well as the magnetic field strength. The Magnetic Field Enhancement is located at around (-680, -140). The white contour indicates the area where the emission was averaged along the vertical (slit) direction to carry out the magnetic field measurements in Figure 2. This image corresponds to the observation carried out during the flare; three more images were obtained before the flare, and three more after the flare.

The spectral scan taken before the flare event showed that at the location of the MFE no measurable magnetic field was present, indicating that the MFE formed within 22 minutes of the flare event. Also, after the flare the MFE was completely dissipated (Figure 2). The magnetic energy contained by the MFE was estimated to be sufficient to power the entire flare.

Figure 2: The magnetic field strength in three consecutive rasters: the one right before the flare, the one including the flare, and the one right after the flare. The X axis reports time in minutes after 7:00 UT.

Conclusions

These results suggest that the coronal magnetic field in plasmas around 1 MK may provide a precursor signature of flare occurrence. If this works out favorably, an early warning for flare/CME occurrence could emerge, and in any case this behavior is already quite interesting technically as a tool for following coronal magnetic restructuring. Much work still needs to be done:

So far, only one flare has been studied, and many more events need to be investigated before answering these questions.

References

[1] "Hinode/EIS measurements of active region magnetic fields"

[2] "Hinode/EIS coronal magnetic field measurements at the onset of a C2 flare"

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