Evidence of chromospheric molecular hydrogen emission in a solar flare observed by the IRIS satellite
Monday
Abstract details
id
Evidence of chromospheric molecular hydrogen emission in a solar flare observed by the IRIS satellite
Date Submitted
2021-04-26 13:51:00
Sargam
Mulay
University of Glasgow, UK
Solar Physics Open Session
Contributed
Sargam M. Mulay (University of Glasgow, UK), Lyndsay Fletcher (University of Glasgow, UK)
We have carried out the first comprehensive investigation of enhanced line emission from molecular hydrogen, H2 at 1333.79 Å, observed at flare ribbons in SOL2014-04-18T13:03. The cool H2 emission is known to be fluorescently excited by Si IV 1402.77 Å UV radiation and provides a unique view of the temperature minimum region (TMR). Strong H2 emission was observed when the Si IV 1402.77 Å emission was bright during the flare impulsive phase and gradual decay phase, but it dimmed during the GOES peak. H2 line broadening showed non-thermal speeds in the range 7-18 km/s, possibly corresponding to turbulent plasma flows. Small red (blue) shifts, up to 1.8 (4.9) km/s were measured. The intensity ratio of Si IV 1393.76 Å and Si IV 1402.77 Å confirmed that plasma was optically thin to Si IV (where the ratio = 2) during the impulsive phase of the flare in locations where strong H2 emission was observed. In contrast, the ratio differs from the optically thin value of 2 in parts of ribbons, indicating a role for opacity effects. A strong spatial and temporal correlation between H2 and Si IV emission was evident supporting the notion that fluorescent excitation is responsible.
The paper based on the above abstract has been accepted for publication in MNRAS and it is available on Arxiv - https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.03329
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