The Role of High-frequency Transverse Oscillations in Coronal Heating
Daye Lim, Tom Van Doorsselaere, David Berghmans, Richard J. Morton,, Vaibhav Pant, and Sudip Mandal

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-frequency transverse oscillations in solar coronal loops, revealing their potential dominant role in coronal heating through a meta-analysis of oscillation parameters and energy flux distributions.
Contribution
It introduces a power law analysis of oscillation energy fluxes and frequencies, highlighting the significance of high-frequency oscillations in coronal heating, which is a novel approach.
Findings
High-frequency oscillations tend to dominate the total heating.
Energy fluxes follow a power law distribution with a slope indicating high-frequency importance.
Oscillation energies range from femtoflare to nanoflare levels, contributing significantly to coronal heating.
Abstract
Transverse oscillations that do not show significant damping in solar coronal loops are found to be ubiquitous. Recently, the discovery of high-frequency transverse oscillations in small-scale loops has been accelerated by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager onboard Solar Orbiter. We perform a meta-analysis by considering the oscillation parameters reported in the literature. Motivated by the power law of the velocity power spectrum of propagating transverse waves detected with CoMP, we consider the distribution of energy fluxes as a function of oscillation frequencies and the distribution of the number of oscillations as a function of energy fluxes and energies. These distributions are described as a power law. We propose that the power law slope () of energy fluxes depending on frequencies could be used for determining whether high-frequency oscillations dominate the total…
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