# Three-dimensional modeling of chromospheric spectral lines in a   simulated active region

**Authors:** Johan P. Bj{\o}rgen, Jorrit Leenaarts, Matthias Rempel, Mark C. M., Cheung, Sanja Danilovic, Jaime de la Cruz Rodr\'iguez, Andrii V., Sukhorukov

arXiv: 1906.01098 · 2019-10-16

## TL;DR

This paper uses 3D MHD simulations and radiative transfer modeling to study chromospheric features like fibrils and flare ribbons, revealing their formation and structure in active regions.

## Contribution

It presents a self-consistent 3D simulation reproducing chromospheric features and analyzes their formation, providing new insights into the role of thermal conduction in flare energy transport.

## Key findings

- Fibrils span up to 4 Mm and are visible in multiple lines.
- Flare ribbons are formed by dense chromosphere and transition region structures.
- Simulated ribbons show profiles similar to observations, suggesting thermal conduction's role.

## Abstract

Because of the complex physics that governs the formation of chromospheric lines, interpretation of solar chromospheric observations is difficult. The origin and characteristics of many chromospheric features are, because of this, unresolved. We focus here on studying two prominent features: long fibrils and flare ribbons. To model them, we use a 3D MHD simulation of an active region which self-consistently reproduces both of them. We model the H$\alpha$, Mg II k, Ca II K, and Ca II 8542 {\AA} lines using the 3D non-LTE radiative transfer code Multi3D.   This simulation reproduces long fibrils that span between the opposite-polarity sunspots and go up to 4 Mm in height. They can be traced in all lines due to density corrugation. Opposite to previous studies, H$\alpha$, Mg II h&k, and Ca II H&K, are formed at similar height in this model. Magnetic field lines are aligned with the H$\alpha$ fibrils, but the latter holds to a lesser extent for the Ca II 8542 {\AA} line.   The simulation shows structures in the H$\alpha$ line core that look like flare ribbons. The emission in the ribbons is caused by a dense chromosphere and a transition region at high column mass. The ribbons are visible in all chromospheric lines, but least prominent in Ca II 8542 {\AA} line. In some pixels, broad asymmetric profiles with a single emission peak are produced, similar to the profiles observed in flare ribbons. They are caused by a deep onset of the chromospheric temperature rise and large velocity gradients.   The simulation produces long fibrils similar to what is seen in observations. It also produces structures similar to flare ribbons despite the lack of non-thermal electrons in the simulation. The latter suggests that thermal conduction might be a significant agent in transporting flare energy to the chromosphere in addition to non-thermal electrons.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01098/full.md

## Figures

15 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01098/full.md

## References

78 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01098/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.01098