An observationally-driven kinetic approach to coronal heating
K. Moraitis, A. Toutountzi, H. Isliker, M. Georgoulis, L. Vlahos, G., Chintzoglou

TL;DR
This study uses a 3D magnetic field extrapolation and particle simulations to investigate coronal heating, revealing that fractally distributed current sheets can heat plasma to over 2 million Kelvin within seconds.
Contribution
It introduces a 3D observationally-driven kinetic model of coronal heating based on magnetic field extrapolation and particle energization in current sheets.
Findings
Coronal plasma can be heated to over 2 MK within seconds.
Fractal distribution of current sheets influences heating efficiency.
Particles gain substantial energy mainly near unstable current sheets.
Abstract
Coronal heating through the explosive release of magnetic energy remains an open problem in solar physics. Recent hydrodynamical models attempt an investigation by placing swarms of 'nanoflares' at random sites and times in modeled one-dimensional coronal loops. We investigate the problem in three dimensions, using extrapolated coronal magnetic fields of observed solar active regions. We apply a nonlinear force-free field extrapolation above an observed photospheric magnetogram of NOAA active region (AR) 11158. We then determine the locations, energy contents, and volumes of 'unstable' areas, namely areas prone to releasing magnetic energy due to locally accumulated electric current density. Statistical distributions of these volumes and their fractal dimension are inferred, investigating also their dependence on spatial resolution. Further adopting a simple resistivity model, we infer…
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