Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Basic properties of magnetohydrodynamics
- 3 Magnetostatic equilibria
- 4 Normal modes and instability
- 5 Nonlinear evolution of MHD instabilities
- 6 Magnetic reconnection
- 7 MHD turbulence
- 8 Disruptive processes in tokamak plasmas
- 9 Dynamics of the reversed-field pinch
- 10 Solar flares
- Outlook
- References
- Index
10 - Solar flares
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Basic properties of magnetohydrodynamics
- 3 Magnetostatic equilibria
- 4 Normal modes and instability
- 5 Nonlinear evolution of MHD instabilities
- 6 Magnetic reconnection
- 7 MHD turbulence
- 8 Disruptive processes in tokamak plasmas
- 9 Dynamics of the reversed-field pinch
- 10 Solar flares
- Outlook
- References
- Index
Summary
Large solar flares are probably the most spectacular eruptive events in cosmical plasmas. Though rather weak in absolute magnitude compared for instance with the enormous energies set free in a supernova explosion, they outshine all other cosmic events for a terrestrial observer. According to the generally accepted picture, a flare constitutes a sudden release of magnetic energy stored in the corona and is therefore primarily an MHD process, though the various nonthermal channels of energy dissipation and deposition, which give rise to the richness of the observations, require a framework broader than MHD theory.
Since the major part of this book is concerned primarily with phenomena in laboratory plasmas, it seems to be convenient for the generally interested reader to find a somewhat broader introduction to this astrophysical topic. The engine driving the magnetic activity in the solar atmosphere is turbulent convection in the solar interior. Section 10.1 therefore gives an overview of our present understanding of the convection zone, in particular magnetoconvection. In section 10.2 we consider the solar atmosphere, its mean stratification, the process of magnetic flux emergence from the convection zone and the magnetic structures in the corona, in particular in active regions. In section 10.3 we then focus in on the MHD modelling of the flare phenomenon.
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- Nonlinear Magnetohydrodynamics , pp. 316 - 348Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993