Carbon monoxide in the solar atmosphere I. Numerical method and two-dimensional models
S. Wedemeyer-Boehm, I. Kamp, J. Bruls, B. Freytag

TL;DR
This paper introduces an upgraded numerical model to simulate carbon monoxide behavior in the solar atmosphere, incorporating chemical reactions and hydrodynamics, revealing non-equilibrium effects especially near shock waves.
Contribution
The study develops a reduced reaction network integrated into the CO5BOLD code, enabling detailed 2D simulations of CO formation and dissociation in the solar atmosphere.
Findings
CO density peaks in cool, mid-photospheric regions
Deviations from equilibrium are significant near chromospheric shocks
OH pathway is the dominant formation channel under solar conditions
Abstract
The radiation hydrodynamic code CO5BOLD has been supplemented with the time-dependent treatment of chemical reaction networks. Advection of particle densities due to the hydrodynamic flow field is also included. The radiative transfer is treated frequency-independently, i.e. grey, so far. The upgraded code has been applied to two-dimensional simulations of carbon monoxide (CO) in the non-magnetic solar photosphere and low chromosphere. For this purpose a reaction network has been constructed, taking into account the reactions which are most important for the formation and dissociation of CO under the physical conditions of the solar atmosphere. The network has been strongly reduced to 27 reactions, involving the chemical species H, H2, C, O, CO, CH, OH, and a representative metal. The resulting CO number density is highest in the cool regions of the reversed granulation pattern at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
