English

Scaling Laws for Dynamic Solar Loops

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2020-12-09 v1

Abstract

The scaling laws which relate the peak temperature TMT_M and volumetric heating rate EHE_H to the pressure PP and length LL for static coronal loops were established over 40 years ago; they have proved to be of immense value in a wide range of studies. Here we extend these scaling laws to {\it dynamic} loops, where enthalpy flux becomes important to the energy balance, and study impulsive heating/filling characterized by upward enthalpy flows. We show that for collision-dominated thermal conduction, the functional dependencies of the scaling laws are the same as for the static case, when the radiative losses scale as T1/2T^{-1/2}, but with a different constant of proportionality that depends on the Mach number MM of the flow. The dependence on the Mach number is such that the scaling laws for low to moderate Mach number flows are almost indistinguishable from the static case. When thermal conduction is limited by turbulent processes, however, the much weaker dependence of the scattering mean free path (and hence thermal conduction coefficient) on temperature leads to a limiting Mach number for return enthalpy fluxes driven by thermal conduction between the corona and chromosphere.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2010.02837,
  title  = {Scaling Laws for Dynamic Solar Loops},
  author = {Stephen J. Bradshaw and A. Gordon Emslie},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2010.02837},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

14 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T19:05:38.582Z