Abstract

Coronal loops are the building blocks of the X-ray bright solar corona. They owe their brightness to the dense confined plasma, and this review focuses on loops mostly as structures confining plasma. After a brief historical overview, the review is divided into two separate but not independent sections: the first illustrates the observational framework, the second reviews the theoretical knowledge. Quiescent loops and their confined plasma are considered, and therefore topics such as loop oscillations and flaring loops (except for non-solar ones which provide information on stellar loops) are not specifically addressed here. The observational section discusses loop classification and populations, and then describes the morphology of coronal loops, its relationship with the magnetic field, and the concept of loops as multi-stranded structures. The following part of this section is devoted to the characteristics of the loop plasma, and of its thermal structure in particular, according to the classification into hot, warm and cool loops. Then, temporal analyses of loops and the observations of plasma dynamics and flows are illustrated. In the modeling section starts some basics of loop physics are provided, supplying some fundamental scaling laws and timescales, a useful tool for consultation. The concept of loop modeling is introduced, and models are distinguished between those treating loops as monolithic and static, and those resolving loops into thin and dynamic strands. Then more specific discussions address modeling the loop fine structure, and the plasma flowing along the loops. Special attention is devoted to the question of loop heating, with separate discussion of wave (AC) and impulsive (DC) heating. Finally, a brief discussion about stellar X-ray emitting structures related to coronal loops is included and followed by conclusions and open questions.

Highlights

  • The corona is the outer part of the solar atmosphere

  • From the analysis of a single loop observed on the solar limb with SOlar and Heliospheric Observatory (SoHO)/CDS, Schmelz et al (2001) found a bias to obtain flat temperature distributions along the loop from ratios of single lines or narrow band filters (TRACE), while a careful differential emission measure (DEM) reconstruction at selected points along the loop is inconsistent with isothermal plasma both across and along the loop

  • Comparative studies of active region loops in the transition region and the corona UgarteUrra et al (2009) observed with Hinode seem to point out the presence of two dominant loop populations, i.e., core multitemperature loops that undergo a continuous process of heating and cooling in the full observed temperature range 0.4 – 2.5 MK shown by the X-Ray Telescope, and peripheral loops which evolve mostly in the temperature range 0.4 – 1.3 MK

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Summary

Introduction

The corona is the outer part of the solar atmosphere. Its name derives from the fact that, since it is extremely tenuous with respect to the lower atmosphere, it is visible in the optical band only during the solar eclipses as a faint crown (corona in Latin) around the black moon disk. Almost all the gas is fully ionized there and interacts effectively with the ambient magnetic field. It is for this reason that the corona appears so inhomogeneous when observed in the X-ray band, in which plasma at million degrees emits most of its radiation. Since the tenuous plasma is optically thin, the intensity of its radiation is proportional to the square of the density, and the tube becomes much brighter than the surrounding ones and looks like a bright closed arch: a coronal loop. This review addresses coronal loops as bright structures confining plasma. Interested readers are urged to survey these other reviews in order to complement and fill in any gaps in topical coverage of the present paper

Historical Keynotes
General properties
Classification
Geometry
Fine structuring
Diagnostics and thermal structuring
Hot loops
Comparison of hot and warm loops
Warm loops
Temporal analysis
Basics
Heating
DC heating
AC heating
Modeling including the magnetic field
New hints
Stellar Coronal Loops
Findings
Conclusions and Perspectives
Full Text
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