NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Hydrogen Balmer Line Broadening in Solar and Stellar FlaresThe broadening of the hydrogen lines during flares is thought to result from increased charge (electron, proton) density in the flare chromosphere. However, disagreements between theory and modeling prescriptions have precluded an accurate diagnostic of the degree of ionization and compression resulting from flare heating in the chromosphere. To resolve this issue, we have incorporated the unified theory of electric pressure broadening of the hydrogen lines into the non-LTE radiative-transfer code RH. This broadening prescription produces a much more realistic spectrum of the quiescent, A0 star Vega compared to the analytic approximations used as a damping parameter in the Voigt profiles. We test recent radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD) simulations of the atmospheric response to high nonthermal electron beam fluxes with the new broadening prescription and find that the Balmer lines are overbroadened at the densest times in the simulations. Adding many simultaneously heated and cooling model loops as a 'multithread' model improves the agreement with the observations. We revisit the three component phenomenological flare model of the YZ CMi Megaflare using recent and new RHD models. The evolution of the broadening, line flux ratios, and continuum flux ratios are well-reproduced by a multithread model with high-flux nonthermal electron beam heating, an extended decay phase model, and a 'hot spot' atmosphere heated by an ultra relativistic electron beam with reasonable filling factors: approximately 0.1%, 1%, and 0.1% of the visible stellar hemisphere, respectively. The new modeling motivates future work to understand the origin of the extended gradual phase emission.
Document ID
20180000644
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Kowalski, Adam F.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Allred, Joel C.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Uitenbroek, Han
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Tremblay, Pier-Emmanuel
(Warwick Univ. Coventry, United Kingdom)
Brown, Stephen
(Glasgow Univ. United Kingdom)
Carlsson, Mats
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Osten, Rachel A.
(Space Telescope Science Inst. Baltimore, MD, United States)
Wisniewski, John P.
(Oklahoma Univ. Norman, OK, United States)
Hawley, Suzanne L.
(Washington Univ. Seattle, WA, United States)
Date Acquired
January 18, 2018
Publication Date
March 10, 2017
Publication Information
Publication: The Astrophysical Journal
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Volume: 837
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0004-637X
Subject Category
Space Radiation
Astrophysics
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN51055
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: HST GO 13323
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX15AF49G
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS5-26555
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

Available Downloads

There are no available downloads for this record.
No Preview Available