Constant cross section of loops in the solar corona
H. Peter, S. Bingert

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD modeling to explain why coronal loops in the Sun's corona appear to have a constant cross section, linking magnetic heating, plasma dynamics, and observational synthesis.
Contribution
It demonstrates how magnetic field braiding and plasma processes in a 3D MHD model can reproduce observed constant-width coronal loops.
Findings
Synthesized emission matches observed loops in count rate.
Loop cross section remains roughly constant in the model.
Temperature varies across the loop, affecting observed brightness.
Abstract
The corona of the Sun is dominated by emission from loop-like structures. When observed in X-ray or extreme ultraviolet emission, these million K hot coronal loops show a more or less constant cross section. In this study we show how the interplay of heating, radiative cooling, and heat conduction in an expanding magnetic structure can explain the observed constant cross section. We employ a three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamics (3D MHD) model of the corona. The heating of the coronal plasma is the result of braiding of the magnetic field lines through footpoint motions and subsequent dissipation of the induced currents. From the model we synthesize the coronal emission, which is directly comparable to observations from, e.g., the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly on the Solar Dynamics Observatory (AIA/SDO). We find that the synthesized observation of a coronal loop seen in the 3D data cube…
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