Selective spatial damping of propagating kink waves due to resonant absorption
J. Terradas, M. Goossens, G. Verth

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that resonant absorption causes selective damping of propagating kink waves in the solar corona, preferentially dissipating high-frequency components and acting as a natural low-pass filter affecting solar atmospheric heating.
Contribution
It provides an analytical model showing how resonant absorption leads to frequency-dependent damping of kink MHD waves in solar magnetic flux tubes.
Findings
Damping length decreases monotonically with frequency.
Low-frequency waves are less damped, high-frequency waves are strongly attenuated.
Resonant absorption acts as a low-pass filter for broadband kink wave spectra.
Abstract
There is observational evidence of propagating kink waves driven by photospheric motions. These disturbances, interpreted as kink magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves are attenuated as they propagate upwards in the solar corona. In this paper we show that resonant absorption provides a simple explanation to the spatial damping of these waves. Kink MHD waves are studied using a cylindrical model of solar magnetic flux tubes which includes a non-uniform layer at the tube boundary. Assuming that the frequency is real and the longitudinal wavenumber complex, the damping length and damping per wavelength produced by resonant absorption are analytically calculated. The damping length of propagating kink waves due resonant absorption is a monotonically decreasing function of frequency. For kink waves with low frequencies the damping length is exactly inversely proportional to frequency and we…
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