A Detailed Comparison Between The Observed and Synthesized Properties of a Simulated Type ii Spicule
Juan Martinez-Sykora, Bart De Pontieu, Jorrit Leenaarts, Tiago M. D., Pereira, Mats Carlsson, Viggo Hansteen, Julie V. Stern, Hui Tian, Scott W., McIntosh, Luc Rouppe van der Voort

TL;DR
This paper compares detailed synthetic observations from 3D radiative MHD simulations of solar jets with actual observations of type II spicules, revealing similarities and differences to improve understanding of their physical nature.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison between simulated and observed properties of type II spicules, highlighting key physical processes and discrepancies to guide future modeling efforts.
Findings
Synthetic observables resemble many observed features.
LOS superposition affects velocity determination.
Discrepancies in chromospheric line opacity and density.
Abstract
We performed a 3D radiative MHD simulation of the solar atmosphere. This simulation shows a jet-like feature that shows similarities to the type II spicules observed for the first time with Hinode. Rapid Blueshifted Events (RBEs) on the solar disk are associated with these spicules. Observational results suggest they may contribute significantly in supplying the corona with hot plasma. We perform a detailed comparison of the properties of the simulated jet with those of type II spicules (observed with Hinode) and RBEs (with ground-based instruments). We analyze variety of synthetic emission and absorption lines from the simulations including chromospheric Ca II and Ha to TR and coronal temperatures (10E4 to several 10E6K). We compare their synthetic intensities, line profiles, Doppler shifts, line widths and asymmetries with observations from Hinode/SOT and EIS, SOHO/SUMER, SST and…
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