• Unprecedented look into 'central engine'

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Jul 27 21:30:32 2020
    Unprecedented look into 'central engine' powering a solar flare

    Date:
    July 27, 2020
    Source:
    New Jersey Institute of Technology
    Summary:
    Researchers have presented a new, detailed look inside the 'central
    engine' of a large solar flare accompanied by a powerful eruption
    by the Owens Valley Solar Array. The new findings offer the first
    measurements characterizing the magnetic fields and particles at
    the heart of the explosion.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In a study published in Nature Astronomy, an international team of
    researchers has presented a new, detailed look inside the "central
    engine" of a large solar flare accompanied by a powerful eruption first captured on Sept. 10, 2017 by the Owens Valley Solar Array (EOVSA) --
    a solar radio telescope facility operated by New Jersey Institute of Technology's (NJIT) Center for Solar- Terrestrial Research (CSTR).


    ==========================================================================
    The new findings, based on EOVSA's observations of the event at microwave wavelengths, offer the first measurements characterizing the magnetic
    fields and particles at the heart of the explosion. The results have
    revealed an enormous electric current "sheet" stretching more than 40,000 kilometers through the core flaring region where opposing magnetic field
    lines approach each other, break and reconnect, generating the intense
    energy powering the flare.

    Notably, the team's measurements also indicate a magnetic bottle-like
    structure located at the top of the flare's loop-shaped base (known as
    the flare arcade) at a height of nearly 20,000 kilometers above the Sun's surface. The structure, the team suggests, is likely the primary site
    where the flare's highly energetic electrons are trapped and accelerated
    to nearly the speed of light.

    Researchers say the study's new insight into the central engine that
    drives such powerful eruptions may aid future space weather predictions
    for potentially catastrophic energy releases from solar flares -- the
    solar system's most powerful explosions, capable of severely disrupting technologies on Earth such as satellite operations, GPS navigation and communication systems, among many others.

    "One of the major goals of this research is to better understand the fundamental physics of solar eruptions," said Bin Chen, the paper's lead
    author and professor of physics at NJIT. "It has been long suggested that
    the sudden release of magnetic energy through the reconnection current
    sheet is responsible for these major eruptions, yet there has been no measurement of its magnetic properties. With this study we've finally
    measured the details of the magnetic field of a current sheet for the
    first time, giving us a new understanding of the central engine of the
    Sun's major flares." "The place where all the energy is stored and
    released in solar flares has been invisible until now. ... To play on a
    term from cosmology, it is the Sun's 'dark energy problem,' and previously we've had to infer indirectly that the flare's magnetic reconnection
    sheet existed," said Dale Gary, EOVSA director at NJIT and co-author of
    the paper. "EOVSA's images made at many microwave frequencies showed we
    can capture radio emissions to illuminate this important region. Once
    we had that data, and the analysis tools created by co-authors Gregory Fleishman and Gelu Nita, we were able to start analyzing the radiation to enable these measurements." Earlier this year in the journal Science, the
    team reported it could finally provide quantitative measurements of the evolving magnetic field strength directly following the flare's ignition.



    ========================================================================== Continuing their investigation, the team's latest analysis combined
    numerical simulations performed at Center for Astrophysics | Harvard
    & Smithsonian (CfA) with EOVSA's spectral imaging observations and multiwavelength data -- spanning radio waves to X-rays -- collected
    from the X8.2-sized solar flare. The flare is the second largest to
    have occurred from the past 11-year solar cycle, occurring with a fast
    coronal mass ejection (CME) that drove a large-scale shock in the upper
    solar corona.

    Among the study's surprises, the researchers found that the measured
    profile of the magnetic field along the flare's current sheet feature
    closely matched predictions from the team's numerical simulations, which
    were based on a well- known theoretical model for explaining solar flare physics, first proposed in the 1990s with an analytical form.

    "It surprised us that the measured magnetic field profile of the current
    sheet beautifully matched the theoretical prediction made decades ago,"
    said Chen.

    "The force of the Sun's magnetic field plays a key role in accelerating
    plasma during an eruption. Our model was used for computing the physics
    of the magnetic forces during this eruption, which manifests as a
    highly twisted 'rope' of magnetic field lines, or magnetic flux rope," explained Kathy Reeves, astrophysicist at CfA and co-author of the
    study. "It is remarkable that this complicated process can be captured by
    a straightforward analytical model, and that the predicted and measured magnetic fields match so well." The simulations, performed by Chengcai
    Shen at CfA, were developed to numerically solve governing equations for quantifying the behavior of electrically conducting plasma throughout the flare's magnetic field. By applying an advanced computational technique
    known as "adaptive mesh refinement," the team was able to resolve the
    thin reconnection current sheet and capture its detailed physics at
    superfine spatial scales to below 100 kilometers.



    ==========================================================================
    "Our simulation results match both the theoretical prediction on magnetic
    field configuration during a solar eruption and reproduce a set of
    observable features from this particular flare, including magnetic
    strength and plasma inflow/outflows around the reconnecting current
    sheet," Shen noted.

    Shocking Measurements The team's measurements and matching simulation
    results revealed that the flare's current sheet features an electric
    field that produces a shocking 4,000 volts per meter. Such a strong
    electric field is present over a 40,000- kilometer region, greater than
    the length of three Earths placed together side by side.

    The analysis also showed a huge amount of magnetic energy being pumped
    into the current sheet at an estimated rate of 10-100 billion trillion (1022-1023) joules per second -- that is, the amount of energy being
    processed at the flare's engine, within each second, is equivalent to
    the total energy released by the explosion of about a hundred thousand
    of the most powerful hydrogen bombs (50-megaton-class) at the same time.

    "Such an enormous energy release at the current sheet is mind-blowing. The strong electric field generated there can easily accelerate the electrons
    to relativistic energies, but the unexpected fact we found was that the electric field profile in the current sheet region did not coincide with
    the spatial distribution of relativistic electrons that we measured," said Chen. "In other words, something else had to be at play to accelerate or redirect these electrons. What our data showed was a special location at
    the bottom of the current sheet -- the magnetic bottle -- appears to be
    crucial in producing or confining the relativistic electrons." "While
    the current sheet seems to be the place where the energy is released
    to get the ball rolling, most of the electron acceleration appears to
    be occurring in this other location, the magnetic bottle. ... Similar
    magnetic bottles are under development for confining and accelerating
    particles in some laboratory fusion reactors." added Gary. "Others have proposed such a structure in solar flares before, but we can truly see
    it now in the numbers." Approximately 99% of the flare's relativistic electrons were observed congregating at the magnetic bottle throughout
    the duration of the five-minute- long emission.

    For now, Chen says the group will be able to apply these new measurements
    as a comparative baseline to study other solar flare events, as well as
    explore the exact mechanism that accelerates particles by combining the
    new observations, numerical simulations and advanced theories. Because
    of the breakthrough capabilities of EOVSA, NJIT was recently selected
    to participate in a joint NASA/NSF DRIVE Science Center Collaboration
    on Solar Flare Energy Release (SolFER).

    "Our goal is to develop a full understanding of solar flares, from their initiation until they finally spray out highly energized particles into
    the solar wind, and eventually, into the space environment of Earth,"
    said Jim Drake, professor of physics at the University of Maryland
    and principal investigator of SolFER who was not involved in this
    study. "These first observations are already suggesting that relativistic electrons might be trapped in a large magnetic bottle produced as the
    magnetic fields of the corona 'reconnect' to release their energy. ... The EOVSA observations will continue helping us unravel how the magnetic
    field drives these energetic electrons." "Further investigating the
    role of the magnetic bottle in particle acceleration and transport will
    require more advanced modeling to compare with EOVSA's observations,"
    said Chen. "There are certainly huge prospects out there for us to study
    that address these fundamental questions."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    New_Jersey_Institute_of_Technology. Original written by Jesse
    Jenkins. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Bin Chen, Chengcai Shen, Dale E. Gary, Katharine K. Reeves,
    Gregory D.

    Fleishman, Sijie Yu, Fan Guo, Sa"m Krucker, Jun Lin, Gelu M. Nita,
    Xiangliang Kong. Measurement of magnetic field and relativistic
    electrons along a solar flare current sheet. Nature Astronomy,
    2020; DOI: 10.1038/ s41550-020-1147-7 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200727145826.htm

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