A Quantitative Model of Energy Release and Heating by Time-dependent, Localized Reconnection in a Flare with a Thermal Loop-top X-ray Source
D.W. Longcope, A.C. Des Jardins, T. Carranza-Fulmer, J. Qiu

TL;DR
This paper develops a three-dimensional model of localized, time-dependent magnetic reconnection that explains the heating, confinement, and sustained high-temperature emission observed in solar flares, aligning well with specific observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel 3D reconnection model that accounts for persistent super-hot plasma sources in solar flares, extending beyond steady-state theories.
Findings
Model predicts super-hot plasma temperatures consistent with observations.
Total energy release aligns with observational estimates.
Reconnection shocks thermalize about a quarter of the flare energy.
Abstract
We present a quantitative model of the magnetic energy stored and then released through magnetic reconnection for a flare on 26 Feb 2004. This flare, well observed by RHESSI and TRACE, shows evidence of non-thermal electrons only for a brief, early phase. Throughout the main period of energy release there is a super-hot (T>30 MK) plasma emitting thermal bremsstrahlung atop the flare loops. Our model describes the heating and compression of such a source by localized, transient magnetic reconnection. It is a three-dimensional generalization of the Petschek model whereby Alfven-speed retraction following reconnection drives supersonic inflows parallel to the field lines, which form shocks heating, compressing, and confining a loop-top plasma plug. The confining inflows provide longer life than a freely-expanding or conductively-cooling plasma of similar size and temperature. Superposition…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
