High-resolution observations of flare precursors in the low solar atmosphere

被引:0
|
作者
Haimin Wang
Chang Liu
Kwangsu Ahn
Yan Xu
Ju Jing
Na Deng
Nengyi Huang
Rui Liu
Kanya Kusano
Gregory D. Fleishman
Dale E. Gary
Wenda Cao
机构
[1] Space Weather Research Laboratory,Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences
[2] New Jersey Institute of Technology,undefined
[3] University Heights,undefined
[4] Big Bear Solar Observatory,undefined
[5] New Jersey Institute of Technology,undefined
[6] Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research,undefined
[7] New Jersey Institute of Technology,undefined
[8] University Heights,undefined
[9] CAS Key Laboratory of Geospace Environment,undefined
[10] University of Science and Technology of China,undefined
[11] Collaborative Innovation Center of Astronautical Science and Technology,undefined
[12] Institute for Space-Earth Environmental Research,undefined
[13] Nagoya University,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Solar flares are generally believed to be powered by free magnetic energy stored in the corona1, but the build up of coronal energy alone may be insufficient to trigger the flare to occur2. The flare onset mechanism is a critical but poorly understood problem, insights into which could be gained from small-scale energy releases known as precursors. These precursors are observed as small pre-flare brightenings in various wavelengths3–13 and also from certain small-scale magnetic configurations such as opposite-polarity fluxes14–16, where the magnetic orientation of small bipoles is opposite to that of the ambient main polarities. However, high-resolution observations of flare precursors together with the associated photospheric magnetic field dynamics are lacking. Here we study precursors of a flare using the unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution of the 1.6-m New Solar Telescope, complemented by new microwave data. Two episodes of precursor brightenings are initiated at a small-scale magnetic channel17–20 (a form of opposite-polarity flux) with multiple polarity inversions and enhanced magnetic fluxes and currents, lying near the footpoints of sheared magnetic loops. Microwave spectra corroborate that these precursor emissions originate in the atmosphere. These results provide evidence of low-atmospheric small-scale energy release, possibly linked to the onset of the main flare.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] High-resolution observations of flare precursors in the low solar atmosphere
    Wang, Haimin
    Liu, Chang
    Ahn, Kwangsu
    Xu, Yan
    Jing, Ju
    Deng, Na
    Huang, Nengyi
    Liu, Rui
    Kusano, Kanya
    Fleishman, Gregory D.
    Gary, Dale E.
    Cao, Wenda
    NATURE ASTRONOMY, 2017, 1 (05):
  • [2] HIGH RESOLUTION OPTICAL OBSERVATIONS OF A SOLAR FLARE
    BACKSTRO.RC
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY, 1971, 16 (08): : 859 - &
  • [3] HIGH-RESOLUTION SOLAR OBSERVATIONS
    TITLE, A
    LECTURE NOTES IN PHYSICS, 1985, 233 : 51 - 61
  • [4] HIGH-RESOLUTION OBSERVATIONS OF FIBRIL CHANGES IN A SMALL FLARE
    NEIDIG, DF
    SOLAR PHYSICS, 1979, 61 (01) : 121 - 128
  • [5] SOLAR-FLARE MICROWAVE OBSERVATIONS WITH HIGH SPECTRAL RESOLUTION
    BRUGGMANN, G
    BENZ, AO
    MAGUN, A
    STEHLING, W
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 1990, 240 (02) : 506 - 510
  • [6] High time resolution observations of the solar flare Hα emission
    Radziszewski, K.
    Rudawy, P.
    Phillips, K. J. H.
    Dennis, B. R.
    RECONNECTION AT SUN AND IN MAGNETOSPHERES, 2006, 37 (07): : 1317 - 1322
  • [7] High-resolution Observations of a White-light Flare with NST
    Yurchyshyn, V.
    Kumar, P.
    Abramenko, V.
    Xu, Y.
    Goode, P. R.
    Cho, K. -S.
    Lim, E. -K.
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2017, 838 (01):
  • [8] HIGH-RESOLUTION OBSERVATIONS OF H-ALPHA FLARE REGIONS
    KUROKAWA, H
    SPACE SCIENCE REVIEWS, 1989, 51 (1-2) : 49 - 84
  • [9] HIGH-RESOLUTION INFRARED SOLAR OBSERVATIONS BY BALLOON
    ZANDER, R
    INFRARED PHYSICS, 1976, 16 (1-2): : 125 - 127
  • [10] A HIGH-RESOLUTION STUDY OF THE ISOTOPES OF SOLAR-FLARE NUCLEI
    MEWALDT, RA
    SPALDING, JD
    STONE, EC
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1984, 280 (02): : 892 - 901