Combining particle acceleration and coronal heating via data-constrained calculations of nanoflares in coronal loops
C. Gontikakis, S. Patsourakos, C. Efthymiopoulos, A. Anastasiadis,, M.K. Georgoulis

TL;DR
This study models nanoflare heating in coronal loops by simulating particle acceleration in current sheets, linking kinetic energy to plasma heating, and validating results with observed X-ray spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a data-constrained approach combining magnetic field extrapolation and particle acceleration modeling to explain coronal heating via nanoflares.
Findings
Kinetic energies of electrons and protons can produce heating rates sustaining coronal plasma.
Simulated X-ray spectra match observed spectra, supporting nanoflare heating.
Hydrodynamic simulations confirm plasma conditions consistent with active region observations.
Abstract
We model nanoflare heating of extrapolated active-region coronal loops via the acceleration of electrons and protons in Harris-type current sheets. The kinetic energy of the accelerated particles is estimated using semi-analytical and test-particle-tracing approaches. Vector magnetograms and photospheric Doppler velocity maps of NOAA active region 09114, recorded by the Imaging Vector Magnetograph (IVM), were used for this analysis. A current-free field extrapolation of the active-region corona was first constructed. The corresponding Poynting fluxes at the footpoints of 5000 extrapolated coronal loops were then calculated. Assuming that reconnecting current sheets develop along these loops, we utilized previous results to estimate the kinetic-energy gain of the accelerated particles and we related this energy to nanoflare heating and macroscopic loop characteristics. Kinetic energies…
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