论文标题
从太阳能电晕检测到无处不在的脉冲非热排放
Detection of weak ubiquitous impulsive nonthermal emissions from the solar corona
论文作者
论文摘要
无处不在的能量释放的存在是解释冠状加热的最有希望的假设之一,称为纳米洛尔假设。与这种弱加热事件相关的加速电子也有望通过MeterWave无线电带中的等离子体不稳定性产生连贯的冲动发射,这使这是一个有希望的光谱窗口,以寻找其存在。最近,\ citet {mondal2020b}报告了宁静的太阳区域中存在弱的冲动排放,这些排放似乎满足了假设的纳米流量的无线电对应物的要求。发现这种低对比度从安静的阳光中发现如此弱的发射是具有挑战性的,鉴于它们的意义,必须确认它们的存在很重要。在这项工作中,使用来自Murchison广场阵列的数据,我们通过将慢慢变化的发射成分与可见性域中的弱冲动性较弱的组分分开,探索了独立的强大方法来检测它们。我们检测到整个阳光下发生的Milli-SFU水平爆发,并表征了它们的亮度温度,分布,形态,持续时间以及与EUV图像中看到的特征相关联。我们还尝试使用前向冠状模型的输入以及一些合理的假设来限制非热粒子的能量,并发现它们位于子PICO Flare($ \ sim 10^{19} -10^{21} {21} $ ergs)范围。在此过程中,我们也可能发现了最弱的III型无线电爆发,而另一个显示出明确的准周期性搏动的明确签名。
A ubiquitous presence of weak energy releases is one of the most promising hypotheses to explain coronal heating, referred to as the nanoflare hypothesis. The accelerated electrons associated with such weak heating events are also expected to give rise to coherent impulsive emission via plasma instabilities in the meterwave radio band, making this a promising spectral window to look for their presence. Recently \citet{Mondal2020b} reported the presence of weak impulsive emissions from quiet Sun regions which seem to meet the requirements of being radio counterparts of the hypothesized nanoflares. Detection of such low-contrast weak emission from the quiet Sun is challenging and, given their implications, it is important to confirm their presence. In this work, using data from the Murchison Widefield Array, we explore the use of an independent robust approach for their detection by separating the dominant slowly varying component of emission from the weak impulsive one in the visibility domain. We detect milli-SFU level bursts taking place all over the Sun and characterize their brightness temperatures, distributions, morphologies, durations and association with features seen in EUV images. We also attempt to constraint the energies of the nonthermal particles using inputs from the FORWARD coronal model along with some reasonable assumptions and find them to lie in the sub-pico flare ($\sim 10^{19}-10^{21}$ ergs) range. In the process, we also discover perhaps the weakest type III radio burst and another one that shows clear signatures of weakest quasi-periodic pulsations.