Lower Hybrid Drive in Solar Magnetic Reconnection Regions: Implications for Electron Acceleration and Solar Heating
Iver H. Cairns
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia 18(4) 336 - 344
Abstract
Lower hybrid (LH) drive involves the resonant acceleration of electrons
parallel to the magnetic field by lower hybrid waves, often driven by ions
with ring or ring-beam distributions. Charge-exchange between hydrogen atoms
and protons with relative motions perpendicular to the magnetic field leads to
ring distributions of pickup ions, with concomitant perpedicular ion
‘heating’. This paper considers the combination of LH drive and
charge-exchange in the outflow regions of magnetic reconnection sites in the
solar chromosphere and lower corona, showing that the combined mechanism
naturally predicts major perpendicular ion heating and parallel electron
acceleration, and exploring the mechanism’s relevance to specific solar
reconnection phenomena, heating of the solar atmosphere, and production of
energetic electrons that generate solar radio emission. Although primarily
qualitative, analysis shows that the mechanism has numerous attractive
aspects, including perpendicular ion heating that increases linearly with ion
mass, parallel electron acceleration, predicted ion and electron temperatures
that span those of the chromosphere and lower corona, and parallel electron
speeds spanning those for type III bursts. Applications to chromospheric
explosive events and low-lying active regions, and to heating the
chromosphere, appear particularly suitable. Sweeping of plasma frozen-in to
chromospheric and coronal magnetic field lines across the neutral atmosphere
due to motions of sub-photospheric fields represents an obvious and important
generalisation of the mechanism away from reconnection sites. The requirements
that the neutrals not be strongly collisionally coupled to the plasma and that
sufficient neutrals are available for charge-exchange restricts the LH drive
mechanism to above the photosphere but below where the corona is essentially
fully ionised. LH drive may thus be important in heating the chromosphere and
low corona while other heating mechanisms dominate at higher altitudes.
Although attractive thus far, quantitative analyses of LH drive in these
contexts are necessary before definitive conclusions are reached.
Keywords: Sun: magnetic fields — Sun: activity
— Sun: chromosphere — waves
Full text doi:10.1071/AS01053
© CSIRO 2001





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