IRIS observations of chromospheric heating by acoustic waves in solar quiet and active regions
V. Abbasvand (1), M. Sobotka (1), M. \v{S}vanda (1, 2), P. Heinzel, (1), W. Liu (1), and L. Mravcov\'a (2) ((1) Astronomical Institute of the, Czech Academy of Sciences (v.v.i.) Ond\v{r}ejov, (2) Astronomical Institute, of Charles University Prague)

TL;DR
This study uses IRIS observations to analyze how acoustic and magnetoacoustic waves contribute to heating the solar chromosphere in quiet and active regions, finding they are sufficient in quiet but not in active areas.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence quantifying the role of acoustic waves in chromospheric heating across different solar regions, highlighting their varying significance.
Findings
In quiet regions, acoustic flux balances radiative losses.
In active regions, acoustic contribution is only 10-30%.
Waves propagate upward at supersonic speeds.
Abstract
Aims: To study the heating of solar chromospheric magnetic and nonmagnetic regions by acoustic and magnetoacoustic waves, the deposited acoustic-energy flux derived from observations of strong chromospheric lines is compared with the total integrated radiative losses. Methods: A set of 23 quiet-Sun and weak-plage regions were observed in the Mg II k and h lines with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). The deposited acoustic-energy flux was derived from Doppler velocities observed at two different geometrical heights corresponding to the middle and upper chromosphere. A set of scaled nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium 1D hydrostatic semi-empirical models (obtained by fitting synthetic to observed line profiles) was applied to compute the radiative losses. The characteristics of observed waves were studied by means of a wavelet analysis. Results: Observed waves propagate…
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