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The Filament Instability in a Sheared Field

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2015

C. Chiuderi
Affiliation:
Istituto di Astronomia, Università di Firenze (Italy)
G. Van Hoven
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of California, Irvine (U.S.A.

Extract

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Filaments and prominences are classical examples of condensations of nongravitational origin, their formation being due to the thermal instability. The physics of this instability in a uniform plasma at coronal temperatures, which exhibits increasing radiative output as it cools, is well known (Field, 1965). Filaments, however, form in regions of sheared magnetic fields, as evidenced by their location above photospheric polarity-inversion lines and their occurrence after a period of increasing fibril inclination (Tandberg-Hanssen, 1974). Physically, the importance of the field structure is readily understood if one recalls the capability of magnetic field of strongly collimating the local heat conduction. Thus, the preferred locations for the development of the thermal instability will be those where the field configuration inhibits the stabilizing effects of thermal conduction on the growing temperature perturbation.

Type
Part IV. Solar Transient Phenomena Affecting the Corona and Interplanetary Medium: - Theoretical Considerations
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1980 

References

Chiuderi, C., and Van Hoven, G.: 1979, Ap. J. (Lett.) 232, L69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Field, G.B.: 1965, Ap. J. 142, 531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hildner, E.: 1974, Solar Phys. 35, 123.Google Scholar
Tandberg-Hanssen, E.: 1974, “Solar Prominences,” Reidel (Dordrecht).Google Scholar