Observational Signatures of Coronal Loop Heating and Cooling Driven by Footpoint Shuffling
R. B. Dahlburg, G. Einaudi, B. D. Taylor, I. Ugarte-Urra, H. P., Warren, A. F. Rappazzo, M. Velli

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to investigate how footpoint shuffling energizes coronal loops, revealing intermittent heating, complex multi-thermal structures, and synthetic emission consistent with solar observations.
Contribution
It introduces detailed 3D MHD simulations of coronal loops driven by footpoint motions, linking turbulent heating processes to observable emission features.
Findings
Heating is spatially and temporally intermittent.
Most of the corona is cooling at any given time.
Simulated emission measures match observational data.
Abstract
The evolution of a coronal loop is studied by means of numerical simulations of the fully compressible three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic equations using the HYPERION code. The footpoints of the loop magnetic field are advected by random motions. As a consequence the magnetic field in the loop is energized and develops turbulent nonlinear dynamics characterized by the continuous formation and dissipation of field-aligned current sheets: energy is deposited at small scales where heating occurs. Dissipation is non-uniformly distributed so that only a fraction of the coronal mass and volume gets heated at any time. Temperature and density are highly structured at scales which, in the solar corona, remain observationally unresolved: the plasma of our simulated loop is multi-thermal, where highly dynamical hotter and cooler plasma strands are scattered throughout the loop at…
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