共 262 条
Review on Current Sheets in CME Development: Theories and Observations
被引:85
作者:
Lin, Jun
[1
]
Murphy, Nicholas A.
[2
]
Shen, Chengcai
[2
]
Raymond, John C.
[2
]
Reeves, Katharine K.
[2
]
Zhong, Jiayong
[3
]
Wu, Ning
[4
]
Li, Yan
[1
]
机构:
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Yunnan Observ, Kunming 650216, Yunnan, Peoples R China
[2] Harvard Smithsonian Ctr Astrophys, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Key Lab Opt Astron, Natl Astron Observ China, Beijing 100012, Peoples R China
[4] Yunnan Normal Univ, Sch Tourism & Geog, Kunming 650092, Yunnan, Peoples R China
基金:
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词:
Sun: flares;
Sun: coronal mass ejections (CMEs);
Plasmas;
Magnetic reconnection;
Instabilities;
CORONAL MASS EJECTION;
SUPRA-ARCADE DOWNFLOWS;
RECONNECTING CURRENT SHEETS;
CURRENT-LAYER FRAGMENTATION;
FIELD LINE SHRINKAGE;
FLUX-ROPE MODELS;
X-RAY TELESCOPE;
MAGNETIC RECONNECTION;
SOLAR-FLARE;
PARTICLE-ACCELERATION;
D O I:
10.1007/s11214-015-0209-0
中图分类号:
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号:
0704 ;
摘要:
We introduce how the catastrophe model for solar eruptions predicted the formation and development of the long current sheet (CS) and how the observations were used to recognize the CS at the place where the CS is presumably located. Then, we discuss the direct measurement of the CS region thickness by studying the brightness distribution of the CS region at different wavelengths. The thickness ranges from to about at heights between 0.27 and from the solar surface. But the traditional theory indicates that the CS is as thin as the proton Larmor radius, which is of order tens of meters in the corona. We look into the huge difference in the thickness between observations and theoretical expectations. The possible impacts that affect measurements and results are studied, and physical causes leading to a thick CS region in which reconnection can still occur at a reasonably fast rate are analyzed. Studies in both theories and observations suggest that the difference between the true value and the apparent value of the CS thickness is not significant as long as the CS could be recognised in observations. We review observations that show complex structures and flows inside the CS region and present recent numerical modelling results on some aspects of these structures. Both observations and numerical experiments indicate that the downward reconnection outflows are usually slower than the upward ones in the same eruptive event. Numerical simulations show that the complex structure inside CS and its temporal behavior as a result of turbulence and the Petschek-type slow-mode shock could probably account for the thick CS and fast reconnection. But whether the CS itself is that thick still remains unknown since, for the time being, we cannot measure the electric current directly in that region. We also review the most recent laboratory experiments of reconnection driven by energetic laser beams, and discuss some important topics for future works.
引用
收藏
页码:237 / 302
页数:66
相关论文