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Title:
Mechanics of Seismic Emission from Solar Flares
Authors:
Lindsey, C.; Donea, A.-C.
Affiliation:
AA(NorthWest Research Associates), AB(Centre for Stellar and Planetary Astrophysics, School of Mathematical Sciences, Monash University)
Publication:
Solar Physics, Volume 251, Issue 1-2, pp. 627-639 (SoPh Homepage)
Publication Date:
09/2008
Origin:
SPRINGER
Keywords:
Flares, dynamics, Helioseismology
DOI:
10.1007/s11207-008-9140-9
Bibliographic Code:
2008SoPh..251..627L

Abstract

Instances of seismic transients emitted into the solar interior in the impulsive phases of some solar flares offer a promising diagnostic tool, both for understanding the physics of solar flares and for the general development of local helioseismology. Among the prospective contributors to flare acoustic emission that have been considered are: i) chromospheric shocks propelled by pressure transients caused by impulsive thick-target heating of the upper and middle chromosphere by high-energy particles, ii) heating of the photosphere by continuum radiation from the chromosphere or possibly by high-energy protons, and iii) magnetic-force transients caused by magnetic reconnection. Hydrodynamic modeling of chromospheric shocks suggests that radiative losses deplete all but a small fraction of the energy initially deposited into them before they penetrate the photosphere. Comparisons between the spatial distribution of acoustic sources, derived from seismic holography of the surface signatures of flare acoustic emission, and the spatial distributions of sudden changes both in visible-light emission and in magnetic signatures offer a possible means of discriminating between contributions to flare acoustic emission from photospheric heating and magnetic-force transients. In this study we develop and test a means for estimating the seismic intensity and spatial distribution of flare acoustic emission from photospheric heating associated with visible-light emission and compare this with the helioseismic signatures of seismic emission. Similar techniques are applicable to transient magnetic signatures.
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