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Solar Flares: Magnetohydrodynamic Processes

TLDR
The current understanding of solar flares, mainly focused on magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) processes responsible for producing a flare, can be found in this article, where the authors present a review of the models proposed to explain the physical mechanism of flares, giving an comprehensive explanation of the key processes.
Abstract
This paper outlines the current understanding of solar flares, mainly focused on magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) processes responsible for producing a flare. Observations show that flares are one of the most explosive phenomena in the atmosphere of the Sun, releasing a huge amount of energy up to about 1032 erg on the timescale of hours. Flares involve the heating of plasma, mass ejection, and particle acceleration that generates high-energy particles. The key physical processes for producing a flare are: the emergence of magnetic field from the solar interior to the solar atmosphere (flux emergence), local enhancement of electric current in the corona (formation of a current sheet), and rapid dissipation of electric current (magnetic reconnection) that causes shock heating, mass ejection, and particle acceleration. The evolution toward the onset of a flare is rather quasi-static when free energy is accumulated in the form of coronal electric current (field-aligned current, more precisely), while the dissipation of coronal current proceeds rapidly, producing various dynamic events that affect lower atmospheres such as the chromosphere and photosphere. Flares manifest such rapid dissipation of coronal current, and their theoretical modeling has been developed in accordance with observations, in which numerical simulations proved to be a strong tool reproducing the time-dependent, nonlinear evolution of a flare. We review the models proposed to explain the physical mechanism of flares, giving an comprehensive explanation of the key processes mentioned above. We start with basic properties of flares, then go into the details of energy build-up, release and transport in flares where magnetic reconnection works as the central engine to produce a flare.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The standard flare model in three dimensions - I. Strong-to-weak shear transition in post-flare loops

TL;DR: In this article, the strong-to-weak shear transition in post-flare loops, and the time-evolution of the geometry of photospheric electric currents, which occur during the development of eruptive flares are investigated.

An optimization approach to reconstructing force-free fields from boundary data: I. Theoretical basis.

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for reconstructing force-free magnetic fields from their boundary values, based on minimizing the global departure of an initial field from a force free and solenoidal state, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging coronal magnetic-field reconnection in a solar flare

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented extreme ultraviolet and X-ray observations of a solar flare showing magnetic reconnection with a level of clarity not previously achieved, including inflowing cool loops and newly formed outflowing hot loops.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetism, dynamo action and the solar-stellar connection

TL;DR: Observations and theory of magnetism in the Sun and other stars are reviewed, with a partial focus on the “Solar-stellar connection”: ways in which studies of other stars have influenced the authors' understanding of theSun and vice versa.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-organized criticality: An explanation of the 1/ f noise

TL;DR: It is shown that dynamical systems with spatial degrees of freedom naturally evolve into a self-organized critical point, and flicker noise, or 1/f noise, can be identified with the dynamics of the critical state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Finite‐Resistivity Instabilities of a Sheet Pinch

TL;DR: In this paper, the stability of a plane current layer is analyzed in the hydromagnetic approximation, allowing for finite isotropic resistivity, and the effect of a small layer curvature is simulated by a gravitational field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sweet's mechanism for merging magnetic fields in conducting fluids

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that two oppositely directed sunspot fields with scales of 104 km could be merged by Sweet's mechanism, if shoved firmly together, in about two weeks; their normal interdiffusion time would be of the order of 600 years.
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How solar flares happened?

The paper explains that solar flares occur due to the rapid dissipation of electric current through a process called magnetic reconnection.