论文标题
太阳轨道上的极化和热震成像仪(PHI)看到的篝火的磁驱动器
The magnetic drivers of campfires seen by the Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager (PHI) on Solar Orbiter
论文作者
论文摘要
太阳轨道(SO)航天器上的极端紫外线成像仪(EUI)观察到小的极端紫外线(EUV)爆发,称为篝火,这些爆发被认为是在安静的sutun氛围中低覆盖的顶点附近的亮度。尚不清楚驱动这些篝火的基础磁过程。在SO的巡航阶段,在0.523 \ au距离太阳的距离上,太阳能轨道仪(SO/PHI)上的极化和热震成像仪与SO/EUI共同观察到了一个安静的区域,可以调查大约380 km的空间分辨率下的表面磁场动力学的可能性。 在38个孤立事件中,有71%\%限制在双极磁特征之间,这似乎表现出取消磁通量的特征。通量取消是在两个主脚关键之间发生的,或者是在篝火旁的环的一个脚步和附近的极性贴片之间。在一个特别清晰的情况下,我们在互联网上检测到了一个小规模的磁环的出现,此后不久,篝火亮了,与光球中线性偏振信号的位置相邻,即在新兴循环台的顶点附近,即在附近。在小的散射磁力特征上观察到其余事件,这些特征无法识别为篝火托管环的磁足。大多数篝火可以由在脚上触发的磁重新连接驱动,类似于文献中讨论的类似爆发的EUV事件中发生的物理过程。然而,大约四分之一的分析篝火与光球中的这种磁活动无关,这意味着其他加热机制正在激发这些小规模的EUV亮度。
The Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) on board the Solar Orbiter (SO) spacecraft observed small extreme ultraviolet (EUV) bursts, termed campfires, that have been proposed to be brightenings near the apexes of low-lying loops in the quiet-Sun atmosphere. The underlying magnetic processes driving these campfires are not understood. During the cruise phase of SO and at a distance of 0.523\,AU from the Sun, the Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager on Solar Orbiter (SO/PHI) observed a quiet-Sun region jointly with SO/EUI, offering the possibility to investigate the surface magnetic field dynamics underlying campfires at a spatial resolution of about 380~km. In 71\% of the 38 isolated events, campfires are confined between bipolar magnetic features, which seem to exhibit signatures of magnetic flux cancellation. The flux cancellation occurs either between the two main footpoints, or between one of the footpoints of the loop housing the campfire and a nearby opposite polarity patch. In one particularly clear-cut case, we detected the emergence of a small-scale magnetic loop in the internetwork followed soon afterwards by a campfire brightening adjacent to the location of the linear polarisation signal in the photosphere, that is to say near where the apex of the emerging loop lays. The rest of the events were observed over small scattered magnetic features, which could not be identified as magnetic footpoints of the campfire hosting loops. The majority of campfires could be driven by magnetic reconnection triggered at the footpoints, similar to the physical processes occurring in the burst-like EUV events discussed in the literature. About a quarter of all analysed campfires, however, are not associated to such magnetic activity in the photosphere, which implies that other heating mechanisms are energising these small-scale EUV brightenings.