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The evolution of coronal loops in response to slow photospheric twisting motions is investigated using a variety of methods. Firstly, by solving the time-dependent equations it is shown that the field essentially evolves through a sequence of 2-D equilibria with no evidence of rapid dynamic evolution. Secondly, a sequence of 1-D equilibria are shown to provide a remarkably good approximation to the 2-D time-dependent results using a fraction of the computer time. Thus, a substantial investigation of parameter space is now possible. Finally, simple bounds on the 3-D stability of coronal loops are obtained. Exact stability bounds can be found by using these bounds to reduce the region of parameter space requiring further investigation. Twisting the loop too much shows that a 3-D instability must be triggered.  相似文献   
2.
The shape of a magnetic flux tube is investigated when photospheric motion causes small twist at the magnetic footpoints. Using a Fourier-Bessel series expansion, the previous results of Zweibel and Boozer (1985) and Steinolfson and Tajima (1987), when the twist is small, are substantiated. A twisting motion that is restricted to a finite region is investigated. Inside the twisted region, the tube contracts, but in the outer region the field remains straight, except for a slight expansion at the outside of the loop near the footpoints. The amount of twist depends on the radial position and can in fact be larger in the contracted region with the twist decreasing as the tube expands. An axial boundary-layer region is present, as noted by the above authors, through which the field adjusts to the line-tied magnetic footpoint positions. An analysis of the boundary layer shows that the thickness remains constant as the loop-length is increased with the result that the main part of the loop has constant cross-sectional area and can be described by cylindrically-symmetric fields. This new 1-D model predicts the main behaviour of the loop without the need to solve the more complicated 2-D problem directly. It is speculated that the boundary layers will remain even when the twist becomes large and a simple example is presented. A detailed parametric study of different twist profiles shows how the central part of the loop responds.Using the result that the majority of the loop can be described by a constant cross-sectional area, a model for a toroidal loop is presented that models coronal loops in a more realistic manner. The main result from this section is that the coronal loops can only remain in equilibrium if they are confined by an external magnetic field (possibly potential in nature) and not by a gas pressure unless additional physical effects are included.  相似文献   
3.
The loss of equilibrium in coronal magnetic field structures is a possible source of energy for coronal heating and solar flares. We investigate whether such a loss of equilibrium occurs when a coronal loop is progressively twisted by photospheric motions. In studies of 2-D cylindrical equilibria, long loops have been found to be of constant cross-sectional area along most of their length, with axial variations being confined to narrow boundary layers. We use this information to develop a 1-D line-tied model, for a 2-D coronal loop. We specify the twist in terms of the azimuthal field and more physically, in terms of the photospheric footpoint displacement. In the former case we find a loss of equilibrium, but not in the latter. We also examine a twisted loop with a non-zero plasma pressure. The loss of equilibrium is only found at high-plasma . It is conjectured that such high- can occur in flare loops and prior to a prominence eruption. However, when the plasma evolves adiabatically, there is no loss of equilibrium.  相似文献   
4.
Lothian  R.M.  Browning  P.K. 《Solar physics》2000,194(2):205-227
A model is developed to describe a coronal loop, which may originate from a photospheric source of smaller size than the coronal radius of the loop. The energy and relative helicity of the loop are evaluated, as are two alternative estimates of the energy available for coronal heating. Both of these estimates are strongly dependent on the size of the photospheric footprint of the loop. A coronal heating rate is then deduced, based on a nanoflare-type scenario, where slowly accumulated energy is rapidly released as heat. An explicit calculation is carried out for one particular choice of loop length and coronal radius, with dissipation timescale and photospheric radius as parameters. Two main conclusions are reached. Firstly, the proposed mechanism can make a significant contribution to coronal heating. Secondly, the mechanism is more effective for a more concentrated photospheric flux source.  相似文献   
5.
A model of the equilibrium structure of the coronal magnetic field is developed, taking account of the fact that field lines are rooted in the photosphere, where field is concentrated into isolated flux tubes. The field is force-free, described by ×B = B, with constant; this field has special physical significance, being the state of mininum energy after small-scale reconnections, and is also mathematically convenient in that the principle of superposition can be used to construct complex geometries. First a model of a single loop is presented, with a flux source and sink pair at the photosphere; both point flux tubes and finite radius flux tubes are considered. Then more complex topologies with multiple sources and sinks are investigated. It is shown that significant topology changes arise for different values of, indicating the possibility that there can be energy changes through magnetic reconnection if the field evolves ideally and then relaxes to a linear state.  相似文献   
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