Structure of solar coronal loops: from miniature to large-scale
H. Peter, S. Bingert, J. A. Klimchuk, C. de Forest, J. W. Cirtain, L., Golub, A. R. Winebarger, K. Kobayashi, K. E. Korreck

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution solar imaging to reveal the detailed structure of coronal loops, discovering miniature loops around 1 Mm in length and examining the sub-structure of larger loops, with implications for solar plasma modeling.
Contribution
First high-resolution observations of miniature coronal loops at 0.2 arcsec resolution, providing new insights into loop sub-structure and plasma organization.
Findings
Miniature coronal loops of about 1 Mm length identified.
Larger loops (>50 Mm) show no visible sub-structure at 0.1 arcsec resolution.
Strands within large loops must be thinner than 15 km.
Abstract
We will use new data from the High-resolution Coronal Imager (Hi-C) with unprecedented spatial resolution of the solar corona to investigate the structure of coronal loops down to 0.2 arcsec. During a rocket flight Hi-C provided images of the solar corona in a wavelength band around 193 A that is dominated by emission from Fe XII showing plasma at temperatures around 1.5 MK. We analyze part of the Hi-C field-of-view to study the smallest coronal loops observed so far and search for the a possible sub-structuring of larger loops. We find tiny 1.5 MK loop-like structures that we interpret as miniature coronal loops. These have length of the coronal segment above the chromosphere of only about 1 Mm and a thickness of less than 200 km. They could be interpreted as the coronal signature of small flux tubes breaking through the photosphere with a footpoint distance corresponding to the…
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