Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of participants
- Group photo
- Preface
- TECHNIQUES FOR OBSERVING SOLAR OSCILLATIONS
- TESTING A SOLAR MODEL: THE FORWARD PROBLEM
- TESTING SOLAR MODELS: THE INVERSE PROBLEM
- GLOBAL CHANGES IN THE SUN
- SOLAR INTERIOR AND SOLAR NEUTRINOS
- THE SOLAR MAGNETIC FIELD
- ACTIVITY IN THE SOLAR ATMOSPHERE AS OBSERVED BY YOHKOH
ACTIVITY IN THE SOLAR ATMOSPHERE AS OBSERVED BY YOHKOH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of participants
- Group photo
- Preface
- TECHNIQUES FOR OBSERVING SOLAR OSCILLATIONS
- TESTING A SOLAR MODEL: THE FORWARD PROBLEM
- TESTING SOLAR MODELS: THE INVERSE PROBLEM
- GLOBAL CHANGES IN THE SUN
- SOLAR INTERIOR AND SOLAR NEUTRINOS
- THE SOLAR MAGNETIC FIELD
- ACTIVITY IN THE SOLAR ATMOSPHERE AS OBSERVED BY YOHKOH
Summary
ABSTRACT
The X-ray Solar Physics Satellite Yohkoh has provided us with a number of new findings about the high temperature and high energy processes occurring in solar flares, in active regions, and in the background corona. According to these new findings, hot and dense corona above active regions seem to be maintained, at least in part, with the injections of already heated mass along the magnetic loops from the footpoint below. The outermost loops of the magnetic structures of these active regions are expanding away almost continuously in the case of “active” active regions. These give us quite a different and lively picture about the active region corona compared with a previous static picture with steady heating that we had based on the previous low cadence observations. New clues to the mechanism of flares, which were hidden thus-far in the yet fainter and relatively short stages before the start of flares, have been revealed by the wide-dynamic range, high cadence observations with the scientific instruments aboard Yohkoh. Those preflare signatures and their changes containing essential information about the mechanism of flares, now allow us to pursue truer understanding about the flare mechanism. The same merits of Yohkoh (wide-dynamic range and high-cadence observations) have shown us for the first time in its full form the highly dynamical behavior of the faint background corona, together with the influence of the changes in active regions sometimes exerting overwhelming effects on the surrounding corona.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Structure of the Sun , pp. 353 - 400Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996