Coronal fuzziness modelled with pulse-heated multistranded loop systems
Massimiliano Guarrasi, Fabio Reale, Giovanni Peres

TL;DR
This study models coronal loop systems with pulse heating to explain why active regions appear fuzzier in certain energy bands, showing that multi-temperature structures cause uniform emission in warm lines.
Contribution
It introduces a multistranded loop model with pulse heating to explain coronal fuzziness and predicts reduced fuzziness in hot X-ray lines.
Findings
Warm lines show more uniform emission due to long-lived 2-3 MK plasma.
Cool lines reveal more contrast with distinct loops.
Fuzziness decreases in hot UV and X-ray lines.
Abstract
Coronal active regions are observed to get fuzzier and fuzzier (i.e. more and more confused and uniform) in harder and harder energy bands or lines. We explain this evidence as due to the fine multi-temperature structure of coronal loops. To this end, we model bundles of loops made of thin strands, each heated by short and intense heat pulses. For simplicity, we assume that the heat pulses are all equal and triggered only once in each strand at a random time. The pulse intensity and cadence are selected so as to have steady active region loops ( MK), on the average. We compute the evolution of the confined heated plasma with a hydrodynamic loop model. We then compute the emission along each strand in several spectral lines, from cool ( MK), to warm ( MK) lines, detectable with Hinode/EIS, to hot X-ray lines. The strands are then put side-by-side to construct an…
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