Evidence of widespread hot plasma in a non-flaring coronal active region from Hinode/XRT
Fabio Reale, Paola Testa, James A. Klimchuk, Susanna Parenti

TL;DR
This study provides evidence of widespread hot plasma around 10 MK in a non-flaring active region, supporting the nanoflare heating hypothesis through analysis of Hinode/XRT data and Monte Carlo simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the presence of bi-modal plasma temperature distributions in active regions, indicating pervasive nanoflaring activity.
Findings
Detection of plasma around 10 MK in the active region.
Bi-modal temperature distributions with cool and hot components.
Hard and soft filter ratio maps are anti-correlated due to temperature sensitivities.
Abstract
Nanoflares, short and intense heat pulses within spatially unresolved magnetic strands, are now considered a leading candidate to solve the coronal heating problem. However, the frequent occurrence of nanoflares requires that flare-hot plasma be present in the corona at all times. Its detection has proved elusive until now, in part because the intensities are predicted to be very faint. Here we report on the analysis of an active region observed with five filters by Hinode/XRT in November 2006. We have used the filter ratio method to derive maps of temperature and emission measure both in soft and hard ratios. These maps are approximate in that the plasma is assumed to be isothermal along each line-of-sight. Nonetheless, the hardest available ratio reveals the clear presence of plasma around 10 MK. To obtain more detailed information about the plasma properties, we have performed Monte…
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