The free energy of NOAA active region AR 11029
S. A. Gilchrist, M. S. Wheatland, K. D. Leka

TL;DR
This study models the magnetic energy of NOAA active region AR 11029 to understand its flare activity, finding it had sufficient energy for large flares despite fewer observed high-class events.
Contribution
It applies a self-consistent nonlinear force-free magnetic field extrapolation to AR 11029, estimating its free energy and challenging previous assumptions about energy limitations.
Findings
Free energy on 24 October was 4x10^29 erg.
Free energy on 27 October was 7x10^31 erg.
Region had enough energy for M- or X-class flares.
Abstract
The NOAA active region AR 11029 was a small but highly active sunspot region which produced 73 GOES soft X-ray flares. The flares appear to show a departure from the well known power-law frequency-size distribution. Specifically, too few GOES C-class and no M-class flares were observed by comparison with a power-law distribution (Wheatland in Astrophys. J. 710, 1324, 2010). This was conjectured to be due to the region having insufficient magnetic energy to power large events. We construct nonlinear force-free extrapolations of the coronal magnetic field of active region AR 11029 using data taken on 24 October by the SOLIS Vector-SpectroMagnetograph (SOLIS/VSM), and data taken on 27 October by the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope SpectroPolarimeter (Hinode/SP). Force-free modeling with photospheric magnetogram data encounters problems because the magnetogram data are inconsistent with a…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
