Is Magnetic Topology Important for Heating the Solar Atmosphere?
C. E. Parnell, J. E. H. Stevenson, J. Threlfall, S. J. Edwards

TL;DR
This review explores how magnetic topology influences heating in the solar atmosphere, analyzing the role of magnetic skeletons, null points, and separators across different solar regions and their potential in energy dissipation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the magnetic skeleton's role in solar atmospheric heating and distinguishes its significance across various solar regions.
Findings
Active regions unlikely heated mainly by reconnection at topological features
Open-field regions' heating may involve magnetic topology effects
Quiet Sun heating could be influenced by magnetic skeleton structures
Abstract
Magnetic fields permeate the entire solar atmosphere weaving an extremely complex pattern on both local and global scales. In order to understand the nature of this tangled web of magnetic fields, its magnetic skeleton, which forms the boundaries between topologically distinct flux domains, may be determined. The magnetic skeleton consists of null points, separatrix surfaces, spines and separators. The skeleton is often used to clearly visualize key elements of the magnetic configuration, but parts of the skeleton are also locations where currents and waves may collect and dissipate. In this review, the nature of the magnetic skeleton on both global and local scales, over solar cycle time scales, is explained. The behaviour of wave pulses in the vicinity of both nulls and separators is discussed and so too is the formation of current layers and reconnection at the same features. Each…
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