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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 101, NO. A6,
PAGES 13,445–13,460,
1996
Heating and activity of the solar corona 1. Boundary shearing of an initially homogeneous magnetic field
Klaus Galsgaard
Astronomical Observatory, Niels Bohr Institute for Astronomy, Physics and Geophysics Copenhagen
Åke Nordlund
Astronomical Observatory, Niels Bohr Institute for Astronomy, Physics and Geophysics Copenhagen
Abstract
To contribute to the understanding of heating and dynamic activity in boundary-driven, low-beta plasmas such as the solar
corona, we investigate how an initially homogeneous magnetic field responds to random large-scale shearing motions on two
boundaries, by numerically solving the dissipative MHD equations, with resolutions ranging from 243 to 1363. We find that even a single application of large-scale shear, in the form of orthogonal sinusoidal shear on two boundaries,
leads to the formation of tangential discontinuities (current sheets). The formation time scales logarithmically with the
resistivity and is of the order of a few times the inverse shearing rate for any reasonable resistivity, even though no mathematical
discontinuity would form in a finite time in the limit of vanishing resistivity. The reason for the formation of the current
sheets is the interlocking of two magnetic flux systems. Reconnection in the current sheets is necessary for the field lines
to straighten out. The formation of current sheets causes a transition to a very dynamic plasma state, where reconnection
drives supersonic and super-Alfvénic jet flows and where these, in turn, cause the formation of smaller-scale current sheets.
A statistically steady state level for the average Poynting flux and the average Joule dissipation is reached after a few
correlation times, but both boundary work and Joule dissipation are highly fluctuating in time and space and are only weakly
correlated. Strong and bursty Joule dissipation events are favored when the volume has a large length/diameter ratio and is
systematically driven for periods longer than the Alfvèn crossing time. The understanding of the reason for the current sheet
formation allows a simple scaling law to be constructed for the average boundary work. Numerical experiments over a range
of parameter values, covering over 3 orders of magnitude in average dissipation, obey the scaling law to within a factor of
2. The heating rate depends on the boundary velocity amplitude and correlation time, the Alfvén speed, and the initial magnetic
field strength but appears to be independent of the resistivity because of the formation of a hierarchy of current sheets.
Estimates of the photospheric boundary work on the solar coronal magnetic field using the scaling law are consistent with
estimates of the required coronal heating rates. We therefore conclude that the work supplied to the solar corona as a consequence
of the motion of the magnetic foot points in the solar photosphere and the emergence of new flux is a significant contributor
to coronal heating and flaring and that it quite plausibly is the dominant one.
Received 23
August
1995;
accepted 2
February
1996.
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Citation: Galsgaard, K., and Å. Nordlund
(1996),
Heating and activity of the solar corona 1. Boundary shearing of an initially homogeneous magnetic field,
J. Geophys. Res.,
101(A6),
13,445–13,460.
Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union.
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