Cross Sections of Coronal Loop Flux Tubes
James A. Klimchuk, Craig E. DeForest

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution observations to analyze coronal loop flux tube cross sections, finding they are approximately circular and questioning previous assumptions about their expansion and structure.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence that flux tube cross sections are roughly circular and challenges existing models of flux tube expansion with height.
Findings
Flux tube cross sections are approximately circular.
Intensity and width are often correlated, indicating uniformity.
Questions the idea of flux tube expansion primarily in the line-of-sight direction.
Abstract
Coronal loops reveal crucial information about the nature of both coronal magnetic fields and coronal heating. The shape of the corresponding flux tube cross section and how it varies with position are especially important properties. They are a direct indication of the expansion of the field and of the cross-field spatial distribution of the heating. We have studied 20 loops using high spatial resolution observations from the first flight of the Hi-C rocket experiment, measuring the intensity and width as a function of position along the loop axis. We find that intensity and width tend to either be uncorrelated or to have a direct dependence, such that they increase or decrease together. This implies that the flux tube cross sections are approximately circular under the assumptions that the tubes have non-negligible twist and that the plasma emissivity is approximately uniform along…
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