Abstract

Context. Densely packed coronal loops are rooted in photospheric plages in the vicinity of active regions on the Sun. The photospheric magnetic features underlying these plage areas are patches of mostly unidirectional magnetic field extending several arcsec on the solar surface. Aims. We aim to explore the transient nature of the magnetic field, its mixed-polarity characteristics, and the associated energetics in the active region plage using high spatial resolution observations and numerical simulations. Methods. We used photospheric Fe I 6173 Å spectropolarimetric observations of a decaying active region obtained from the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST). These data were inverted to retrieve the photospheric magnetic field underlying the plage as identified in the extreme-ultraviolet emission maps obtained from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). To obtain better insight into the evolution of extended unidirectional magnetic field patches on the Sun, we performed 3D radiation magnetohydrodynamic simulations of magnetoconvection using the MURaM code. Results. The observations show transient magnetic flux emergence and cancellation events within the extended predominantly unipolar patch on timescales of a few 100 s and on spatial scales comparable to granules. These transient events occur at the footpoints of active region plage loops. In one case the coronal response at the footpoints of these loops is clearly associated with the underlying transient. The numerical simulations also reveal similar magnetic flux emergence and cancellation events that extend to even smaller spatial and temporal scales. Individual simulated transient events transfer an energy flux in excess of 1 MW m−2 through the photosphere. Conclusions. We suggest that the magnetic transients could play an important role in the energetics of active region plage. Both in observations and simulations, the opposite-polarity magnetic field brought up by transient flux emergence cancels with the surrounding plage field. Magnetic reconnection associated with such transient events likely conduits magnetic energy to power the overlying chromosphere and coronal loops.

Highlights

  • The energization of the upper atmosphere of cool stars eludes comprehensive understanding

  • In a plage area at the footpoints of a system of non-moss fan loops that we identified in Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) images

  • The small granularscale flux emergence and cancellation events found both in the observations and simulations suggest a very dynamic evolution of mostly unipolar magnetic plages on the Sun at small spatial scale

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Summary

Introduction

The energization of the upper atmosphere of cool stars eludes comprehensive understanding. Possible that the energy transport from highly dynamic footpoint reconnection from flux cancellation events is responsible for the high variability seen in the moss at the footpoints of hot coronal loops (Chitta et al 2018) Central to understanding these details is the question of energy transport into the corona and the inherent role of magnetic field dynamics in the process. This question pertains to plage areas where high-rising densely packed EUV loops are rooted (i.e., without hot X-ray loops and without low-lying moss-like EUV emission). Our results indicate the important role of magnetic transients in the energetics of extended unipolar active region plage areas

Observations of magnetic transients in a plage
Simulations of magnetic transients in a plage
Conclusions
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