MHD modeling of coronal loops: injection of high-speed chromospheric flows
A. Petralia, F. Reale, S. Orlando, J. A. Klimchuk

TL;DR
This study uses 2-D MHD simulations to explore how high-speed chromospheric flows can generate EUV emission in coronal loops, revealing shock heating as a possible explanation for observed phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed MHD modeling of chromospheric jet propagation and shock formation in coronal loops, linking flows to EUV bright fronts.
Findings
Shock fronts heat plasma to ~10^6 K, producing bright EUV fronts.
High-speed flows can generate observable EUV emission in coronal loops.
The model explains some observed spicule-associated EUV features.
Abstract
Observations reveal a correspondence between chromospheric type II spicules and bright upwardly moving fronts in the corona observed in the EUV band. However, theoretical considerations suggest that these flows are unlikely to be the main source of heating in coronal magnetic loops. We investigate the propagation of high-speed chromospheric flows into coronal magnetic flux tubes, and the possible production of emission in the EUV band. We simulate the propagation of a dense K chromospheric jet upwards along a coronal loop, by means of a 2-D cylindrical MHD model, including gravity, radiative losses, thermal conduction and magnetic induction. The jet propagates in a complete atmosphere including the chromosphere and a tenuous cool ( MK) corona, linked through a steep transition region. In our reference model, the jet's initial speed is 70 km/s, its initial density is…
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