The multi-thermal and multi-stranded nature of coronal rain
P. Antolin, G. Vissers, T. M. D. Pereira, L. Rouppe van der Voort, E., Scullion

TL;DR
This study reveals that coronal rain is a highly multi-thermal, clumpy, and structured phenomenon with complex cooling processes, significant density variations, and a key role in the chromosphere-corona mass cycle, based on high-resolution coordinated observations.
Contribution
It provides detailed high-resolution analysis of coronal rain's multi-thermal nature, structure, and cooling progression, highlighting its importance in solar plasma dynamics.
Findings
Coronal rain is multi-thermal with co-spatial multi-wavelength emission.
Cooling occurs in a two-step catastrophic process, transitioning to optically thick plasma.
Coronal rain significantly contributes to the chromosphere-corona mass flux.
Abstract
In this work, we analyse coordinated observations spanning chromospheric, TR and coronal temperatures at very high resolution which reveal essential characteristics of thermally unstable plasmas. Coronal rain is found to be a highly multi-thermal phenomenon with a high degree of co-spatiality in the multi-wavelength emission. EUV darkening and quasi-periodic intensity variations are found to be strongly correlated to coronal rain showers. Progressive cooling of coronal rain is observed, leading to a height dependence of the emission. A fast-slow two-step catastrophic cooling progression is found, which may reflect the transition to optically thick plasma states. The intermittent and clumpy appearance of coronal rain at coronal heights becomes more continuous and persistent at chromospheric heights just before impact, mainly due to a funnel effect from the observed expansion of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
