Thermal and non-thermal emission from reconnecting twisted coronal loops
R. F. Pinto, M. Gordovskyy, P.K. Browning, N. Vilmer

TL;DR
This study combines MHD simulations and test-particle methods to explore thermal and non-thermal emissions from twisted coronal loops during magnetic reconnection, offering insights into flare-related plasma heating and particle acceleration.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation approach that models kink instability, magnetic reconnection, and resulting emissions in twisted coronal loops, highlighting differences from standard flare models.
Findings
HXR emission concentrates at loop foot-points.
Emission patterns can differ from magnetic field geometry.
HXR peaks precede SXR peaks, with a proportional relationship.
Abstract
Twisted magnetic fields should be ubiquitous in flare-producing active regions where the magnetic fields are strongly non-potential. It has been shown that reconnection in helical magnetic coronal loops results in plasma heating and particle acceleration distributed within a large volume, including the lower coronal and chromospheric sections of the loops. This scenario can be an alternative to the standard flare model, where particles are accelerated only in a small volume located in the upper corona. We use a combination of MHD simulations and test-particle methods, which describe the development of kink instability and magnetic reconnection in twisted coronal loops using resistive compressible MHD, and incorporate atmospheric stratification and large-scale loop curvature. The resulting distributions of hot plasma let us estimate thermal X-ray emission intensities. The electric and…
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