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Radiative Losses in the Chromosphere During A C-Class FlareContext. Solar flares release an enormous amount of energy (~10(exp 32) erg) into the corona. A substantial fraction of this energy is transported to the lower atmosphere, which results in chromospheric heating. The mechanisms that transport energy to the lower solar atmosphere during a flare are still not fully understood.

Aims. We aim to estimate the temporal evolution of the radiative losses in the chromosphere at the footpoints of a C-class flare, in order to set observational constraints on the electron beam parameters of a RADYN flare simulation.

Methods. We estimated the radiative losses from hydrogen, and singly ionized Ca and Mg using semiempirical model atmospheres, which were inferred from a multiline inversion of observed Stokes profiles obtained with the CRISP and CHROMIS instruments on the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope. The radiative losses were computed taking into account the effect of partial redistribution and non-local thermodynamic equilibrium. To estimate the integrated radiative losses in the chromosphere, the net cooling rates were integrated between the temperature minimum and the height where the temperature reaches 10 kK. We also compared our time series of radiative losses with those from the RADYN flare simulations.

Results. We obtained a high spatial-resolution map of integrated radiative losses around the flare peak time. The stratification of the net cooling rate suggests that the Ca IR triplet lines are responsible for most of the radiative losses in the flaring atmosphere. During the flare peak time, the contribution from Ca II H and K and Mgii h and k lines are strong and comparable to the Ca IR triplet (~32kW m(exp -2)). Since our flare is a relatively weak event, the chromosphere is not heated above 11 kK, which in turn yields a subdued Lyα contribution (~7kW m(exp -2)) in the selected limits of the chromosphere. The temporal evolution of total integrated radiative losses exhibits sharply rising losses (0.4kW m(exp -2) (s(exp -1)) and a relatively slow decay (0.23kW m(exp -2) s(exp -1)). The maximum value of total radiative losses is reached around the flare peak time and can go up to 175kWm􀀀2 for a single pixel located at footpoint. After a small parameter study, we find the best model-data consistency in terms of the amplitude of radiative losses and the overall atmospheric structure with a RADYN flare simulation in the injected energy flux of 5 × 10(exp 10) erg s(exp -1) cm(exp -2).
Document ID
20230001286
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
R Yadav
(Stockholm University Stockholm, Sweden)
J de la Cruz Rodríguez
(Stockholm University Stockholm, Sweden)
G S Kerr ORCID
(Catholic University of America Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
C J Díaz Baso
(Stockholm University Stockholm, Sweden)
J Leenaarts
(Stockholm University Stockholm, Sweden)
Date Acquired
January 26, 2023
Publication Date
September 7, 2022
Publication Information
Publication: Astronomy & Astrophysics
Publisher: EDP Sciences
Volume: 665
Issue Publication Date: September 1, 2022
ISSN: 0004-6361
e-ISSN: 1432-0746
Subject Category
Solar Physics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC21K0460
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC21M0180
CONTRACT_GRANT: SPEC5732
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Chromosphere
Solar flares
Solar activity
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