Free access article
A&A 373, 318-328 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010524
A nanoflare heating model for the quiet solar corona
U. Mitra-Kraev and A. O. BenzInstitute of Astronomy, ETH-Zentrum, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland
e-mail: benz@astro.phys.ethz.ch; urmila@astro.phys.ethz.ch
(Received 29 January 2001 / Accepted 4 April 2001 )
Abstract
The energy input into the lower solar corona by flare evaporation events has been
modeled according to the available observations for quiet regions. The
question is addressed whether such heating events can provide the observed
average level of the coronal emission measure and thus of the observed flux of
extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and X-ray emission without contradicting the
observed average power spectrum of the emission measure, the typical emission
measure variations observed for individual pixels and the observed flare energy
distribution. As the assumed flare height influences the derived flare energy, the
mathematical foundations of nanoflare distributions and their conversion to
different height assumptions are studied first. This also allows a comparison with various published energy distributions
differing in height assumptions and to relate the observations to the input parameters of the heating model. An analytic
evaluation of the power spectrum yields the relationship between the average time
profile of nanoflares (or microflares), assumed to be self-similar in energy, and the power spectrum. We find that the power
spectrum is very sensitive to the chosen time profile of the flares. Models are found by numerical simulation that fit all
available observations. They are not unique but severely constrained. We concentrate on a model with a flare height proportional
to the square root of the flare area. The existence of a fitting model demonstrates that nanoflare heating of the corona is
a viable and attractive mechanism.
Key words: Sun: corona -- Sun: flares -- Sun: transition region -- Sun: chromosphere -- Sun: UV radiation -- Sun: activity
Offprint request: A. O. Benz, benz@astro.phys.ethz.ch
© ESO 2001



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