Extreme-ultraviolet bursts and nanoflares in the quiet-Sun transition region and corona
L. P. Chitta, H. Peter, P. R. Young

TL;DR
This study analyzes EUV bursts in the quiet Sun's transition region and corona using SDO/AIA data, finding that these bursts are too infrequent and low-energy to significantly heat the corona, but future Solar Orbiter data may reveal more events.
Contribution
It provides a statistical analysis of EUV bursts in the quiet Sun, estimating their energies and occurrence rates, and assesses their role in coronal heating with implications for future high-resolution observations.
Findings
EUV bursts peak at about 120 seconds in lifetime.
Detected bursts have energies around 10^{24} erg.
Current bursts are insufficient to explain coronal heating.
Abstract
The quiet solar corona consists of myriads of loop-like features, with magnetic fields originating from network and internetwork regions on the solar surface. The continuous interaction between these different magnetic patches leads to transient brightenings or bursts that might contribute to the heating of the solar atmosphere. However, it remains unclear whether such transients, which are mostly observed in the EUV, play a significant role in atmospheric heating. We revisit the open question of these bursts as a prelude to the new high-resolution EUV imagery expected from the recently launched Solar Orbiter. We use EUV images recorded by the SDO/AIA to investigate statistical properties of the bursts. We detect the bursts in the 171 {\AA} filter images of AIA in an automated way through a pixel-wise analysis by imposing different intensity thresholds. By exploiting the high cadence…
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