Abstract

A model of solar flares is proposed in which the preflare state comprises a bipolar magnetic-field structure associated with a bipolar photospheric magnetic region. At low heights, the magnetic-field lines are closed but, at sufficiently great heights, the lines are drawn out into an open structure comprising a bipolar flux tube containing a ‘neutral sheet’ or ‘sheet pinch’. Such a sheet pinch is probably related to a coronal streamer. The energy stored in the closed-field region is derived from photospheric motion whereas energy stored in the open-field region is derived from the non-thermal energy flux which heats the corona and drives the solar wind.The flare itself is identified with reconnection of magnetic field by the tearing-mode resistive instability. If the thickness of the sheet pinch is determined by resistive diffusion and a growth time of the bipolar region of order 1 day, the transverse dimension will be about 104 cm. The rise time of the tearing-mode instability is then a few seconds, compatible with the characteristic time of Type-III radio bursts. One can understand that the time-scale of the reconnection process is of order 102–103 sec if reconnection proceeds by the Petscheck mechanism, with the modification that resistive diffusion is replaced by the more rapid Bohm diffusion.The evolution of a flare, according to this model, appears to fit a number of the observational characteristics of flares.

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