A&A 492, 857-862 (2008)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:200809928
On the ultraviolet signatures of small scale heating in coronal loops
S. Parenti1 and P. R. Young21 Royal Observatory of Belgium, 3 Av. Circulaire, 1180 Bruxelles, Belgium
e-mail: s.parenti@oma.be
2 Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton, Didcot, Oxfordshire, OX11 0QX, UK
Received 8 April 2008 / Accepted 26 August 2008
Abstract
Aims. Studying the statistical properties of solar ultraviolet emission
lines could provide information about the nature of small scale coronal
heating. We expand on previous work to investigate
these properties. We study whether the predicted
statistical distribution of ion emission line intensities produced by a
specified heating function is affected by the isoelectronic
sequence to which the ion belongs, as well as the characteristic temperature at which it was
formed (as found previously). Particular emphasis is placed on
the strong resonance lines belonging to the lithium isoelectronic
sequence. Predictions for emission lines observed by existing
space-based UV spectrometers are given. The effects on the statistics of a line when
observed with a wide-band imaging instrument rather than a
spectrometer are also investigated.
Methods. We use a hydrodynamic model to simulate the UV emission of a loop
system heated by nanoflares on small, spatially unresolved
scales. We select lines emitted at similar temperatures but
belonging to different isoelectronic groups:
and
,
and
,
,
and
.
Results. Our simulations confirm previous results that almost all
lines have an intensity distribution that follows a power-law, in a
similar way to the heating function. However, only the high temperature
lines best preserve the heating function's power law index (
being the best ion in the case presented here). The Li isoelectronic lines have different statistical properties with respect to the lines from other sequences, due to the extended high temperature tail of their
contribution functions. However, this is not the case for
which may be used as a diagnostic of the coronal heating function. We also show that the power-law index of the
heating function is effectively preserved when a line is observed
by a wide-band imaging instrument rather than a spectromenter.
Key words: Sun: UV radiation -- Sun: corona -- plasmas -- methods: statistical
© ESO 2008
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