Simulations of Magnetohydrodynamic Waves Driven by Photospheric Motions
Description
This thesis investigates the properties of various modelled photospheric motions as generation mechanisms for magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves in the low solar atmosphere. The solar atmosphere is heated to million-degree temperatures, yet there is no fully understood heating mechanism which can provide the \(\approx 300 \text{ W/m}^2\) required to keep the quiet corona at its observed temperatures. MHD waves are one mechanism by which this energy could be provided to the upper solar atmosphere, however, these waves need to be excited. The excitation of these waves, in or below the photosphere is a complex interaction between the plasma and the magnetic field embedded within it. This thesis studies a model of a small-scale magnetic flux tube based upon a magnetic bright point (MBP). These features are very common in the photosphere and have been observed to be affected by the plasma motions. The modelled flux tube has a foot point magnetic field strength of 120 mT and a FWHM of 90 km, and is embedded in a realistic, stratified solar atmosphere based upon the VALIIIc model. To better understand the excitation of MHD waves in this type of magnetic structures, a selection of velocity profiles are implemented to excite waves. Initially a study of five different driving profiles was performed. A uniform torsional driver as well as Archimedean and logarithmic spiral drivers which mimic observed torsional motions in the solar photosphere, along with vertical and horizontal drivers to mimic different motions caused by convection in the photosphere. The results are then analysed using a novel method for extracting the parallel, perpendicular and azimuthal components of the perturbations, which caters to both the linear and non-linear cases. Employing this method yields the identification of the wave modes excited in the numerical simulations and enables a comparison of excited modes via velocity perturbations and wave energy flux. The wave energy flux distribution is calculated, to enable the quantification of the relative strengths of excited modes. The torsional drivers primarily excite Alfvén modes (\(\approx 60 \%\) of the total flux) with contributions from the slow mode. The horizontal and vertical drivers primarily excite slow and fast modes respectively, with small variations dependent upon flux surface radius. This analysis is then applied to more in depth studies of the logarithmic spiral driver. Firstly, five different values for the \(B_L\) spiral expansion factor are chosen which control how rapidly the spiral expands. Larger values of \(B_L\) make the driving profile more radial. The results of this analysis show that the Alfvén wave is the dominant wave for lower values of the expansion factor, whereas, for the higher values the parallel component is dominant. This transition occurs within the range of the observational constraints, demonstrating that under realistic conditions spiral drivers may not excite most of their wave flux in the Alfvén mode. Finally, the logarithmic spiral is further studied, but with a variety of different periods. Ten periods from 30 to 300 seconds are chosen, and the simulations are again analysed using the flux surface method employed previously. The results of this study are minimal variation in the percentage wave flux in each mode, with no more than 20 % variation in any mode for any flux surface studied. Within this small variation, some non-linear changes in the wave flux were observed, especially around the more important small periods. Due to the short life time of the MBPs it is thought the short period waves would have more effect and therefore this non-linear variation in wave flux could have some impact on the modes present in the solar atmosphere.
Files
smumford_thesis.pdf
Files
(10.3 MB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:a86be518cfa14afa862cfaea68b1b87a
|
10.3 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Related works
- Is compiled by
- 10.5281/zenodo.48891 (DOI)
- Is identical to
- http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/id/eprint/12283 (URL)
References
- Alfvén, H. (1942). Existence of Electromagnetic-Hydrodynamic Waves. Nature, 150(3805):405–406.
- Aschwanden, M. J., Winebarger, A., Tsiklauri, D., and Peter, H. (2007). The Coronal Heating Paradox. The Astrophysical Journal, 659(2):1673–1681.
- Bogdan, T. and Judge, P. (2006). Observational aspects of sunspot oscillations. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 364(1839):313–331.
- Bogdan, T. J., Carlsson, M., Hansteen, V., McMurry, A., Rosenthal, C. S., Johnson, M., Petty-Powell, S., Zita, E. J., Stein, R. F., McIntosh, S. W., and Nordlund, Å. (2003).
- Waves in the Magnetized Solar Atmosphere. II. Waves from Localized Sources in Magnetic Flux Concentrations. The Astrophysical Journal, 599:626–660.
- Bonet, J. A., Márquez, I., Almeida, J. S., Palacios, J., Pillet, V. M., Solanki, S. K., del Toro Iniesta, J. C., Domingo, V., Berkefeld, T., Schmidt, W., Gandorfer, A., Barthol, P., and Knölker, M. (2010). Sunrise/Imax Observations of Convectively Driven Vortex Flows in the Sun. The Astrophysical Journal, 723(2):L139–L143.
- Bonet, J. A., Márquez, I., Sánchez Almeida, J., Cabello, I., and Domingo, V. (2008). Convectively Driven Vortex Flows in the Sun. The Astrophysical Journal, 687(2):L131–L134.
- Dorotovič, I., Erdélyi, R., Freij, N., Karlovský, V., and Márquez, I. (2014). Standing sausage waves in photospheric magnetic waveguides. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 563:A12.
- Erdélyi, R. and Ballai, I. (2007). Heating of the solar and stellar coronae: a review. Astronomische Nachrichten, 328(8):726–733.
- Fedun, V., Shelyag, S., and Erdélyi, R. (2011). Numerical Modeling of Footpoint-Driven Magneto-Acoustic Wave Propagation in a Localized Solar Flux Tube. The Astrophysical Journal, 727(1):17.96
- Feng, S., Deng, L., Yang, Y., and Ji, K. (2013). Statistical study of photospheric bright points in an active region and quiet Sun. Astrophysics and Space Science, 348(1):17–24.
- Feynman, R. P., Leighton, R. B., Sands, M., and Treiman, S. B. (1964). The Feynman Lectures on Physics. Physics Today, 17(8):45.
- Freeland, S. and Handy, B. (1998). Data analysis with the SolarSoft system. Solar Physics, 182(2):497–500.
- Freij, N., Scullion, E. M., Nelson, C. J., Mumford, S., Wedemeyer, S., and Erdélyi, R. (2014). The Detection of Upwardly Propagating Waves Channeling Energy from the Chromosphere to the Low Corona. The Astrophysical Journal, 791(1):61.Fujimura, D. and Tsuneta, S. (2009).
- Properties of Magnetohydrodynamic Waves in the Solar Photosphere Obtained with HINODE. The Astrophysical Journal, 702(2):1443–1457.
- Gent, F. A., Fedun, V., and Erdélyi, R. (2014). Magnetohydrostatic Equilibrium. II. Three-Dimensional Multiple Open Magnetic Flux Tubes in the Stratified Solar Atmosphere. The Astrophysical Journal, 789(1):42.
- Gent, F. A., Fedun, V., Mumford, S. J., and Erdelyi, R. (2013). Magnetohydrostatic equilibrium - I. Three-dimensional open magnetic flux tube in the stratified solar atmosphere. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 435(1):689–697.
- Goedbloed, J. P. H. and Poedts, S. (2004). Principles of Magnetohydrodynamics. Cambridge University Press.
- Greenfield, P. (2011). What Python Can Do for Astronomy. In Astronomical Data Analysis Software and Systems XX, volume 442, page 425.
- Greisen, E. W. and Calabretta, M. R. (2002). Representations of world coordinates in FITS. arXiv:astro-ph/0207407. Astron.Astrophys. 395 (2002) 1061-1076.
- Hunter, J. D. (2007). Matplotlib: A 2D Graphics Environment. Computing in Science & Engineering, 9(3):90–95.
- Jess, D. B., Mathioudakis, M., Erdélyi, R., Crockett, P. J., Keenan, F. P., and Christian, D. J. (2009). Alfven Waves in the Lower Solar Atmosphere. Science, 323(5921):1582–1585.
- Jess, D. B., Morton, R. J., Verth, G., Fedun, V., Grant, S. D. T., and Giagkiozis, I. (2015). Multiwavelength Studies of MHD Waves in the Solar Chromosphere: An Overview of Recent Results. Space Science Reviews, 190(1-4):103–161.97
- Jones, E., Oliphant, T., and Peterson, P. (2001). SciPy: Open source scientific tools for Python. http://www.scipy.org/.
- Kelvinsong (2015). Diagram of the Sun (Wikipedia).
- Keys, P. H., Mathioudakis, M., Jess, D. B., Shelyag, S., Christian, D. J., and Keenan, F. P. (2013). Tracking magnetic bright point motions through the solar atmosphere. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 428(4):3220–3226.
- Khomenko, E., Collados, M., Díaz, A., and Vitas, N. (2014). Fluid description of multi-component solar partially ionized plasma. Physics of Plasmas, 21(9):092901.
- Kobanov, N. I., Kolobov, D. Y., and Makarchik, D. V. (2006). Umbral Three-Minute Oscillations and Running Penumbral Waves. Solar Physics, 238(2):231–244.
- Kumar, N. and Roberts, B. (2003). ION–Neutral Collisions Effect on MHD Surface Waves. Solar Physics, 214(2):241–266.
- Leighton, R. B., Noyes, R. W., and Simon, G. W. (1962). Velocity Fields in the Solar Atmosphere. I. Preliminary Report. The Astrophysical Journal, 135:474.
- Leroy, B. (1985). On the derivation of the energy flux of linear magnetohydrody-namic waves. Geophysical & Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics, 32(2):123–133.
- Mathioudakis, M., Jess, D. B., and Erdélyi, R. (2013). Alfvén Waves in the Solar Atmosphere: From Theory to Observations. Space Science Reviews, 175(1-4):1–27.
- McIntosh, S. W., De Pontieu, B., Carlsson, M., Hansteen, V., Boerner, P., and Goossens, M. (2011). Alfvénic waves with sufficient energy to power the quiet solar corona and fast solar wind. Nature, 475(7357):477–480.
- McKinney, W. (2010). Data Structures for Statistical Computing in Python. In van der Walt, S. and Millman, J., editors, Proceedings of the 9th Python in Science Conference, pages 51 – 56.
- McKinney, W. (2012). Python for Data Analysis. O’Reilly Media, Sebastopol, CA. McWhirter, R. W. P., Thonemann, P. C., and Wilson, R. (1975). The heating of the solar corona. II - A model based on energy balance. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 40:63–73.
- Morton, R. J., Erdélyi, R., Jess, D. B., and Mathioudakis, M. (2011). Observations of Sausage Modes in Magnetic Pores. The Astrophysical Journal, 729(2):L18.98
- Morton, R. J., Verth, G., Jess, D. B., Kuridze, D., Ruderman, M. S., Mathioudakis, M., and Erdélyi, R. (2012). Observations of ubiquitous compressive waves in the Suns chromosphere. Nature Communications, 3:1315.
- Mumford, S. J., Fedun, V., and Erdélyi, R. (2015). Generation of Magnetohydrodynamic Waves in Low Solar Atmospheric Flux Tubes by Photospheric Motions. The Astrophysical Journal, 799(1):6.
- Nordlund, Å. and Galsgaard, K. (1995). A 3D MHD Code for Parallel Computers.
- Parnell, C. E. and De Moortel, I. (2012). A contemporary view of coronal heating. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 370(1970):3217–3240.
- Pence, W. D., Chiappetti, L., Page, C. G., Shaw, R. A., and Stobie, E. (2010). Definition of the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), version 3.0. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 524:A42.
- Perez, F. and Granger, B. E. (2007). IPython: A System for Interactive Scientific Computing. Computing in Science & Engineering, 9(3):21–29.
- Pesnell, W. D., Thompson, B. J., and Chamberlin, P. C. (2012). The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Solar Physics, 275(1-2):3–15.
- Poore, G. M. (2015). PythonTeX: reproducible documents with LaTeX, Python, and more. Computational Science & Discovery, 8(1):014010.
- Priest, E. R. (2014). Magnetohydrodynamics of the Sun. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY.
- Ramachandran, P. and Varoquaux, G. (2011). Mayavi: 3D Visualization of Scientific Data. Computing in Science & Engineering, 13(2):40–51.
- Reznikova, V. E. and Shibasaki, K. (2012). Spatial Structure of Sunspot Oscillations Observed with SDO/AIA. The Astrophysical Journal, 756(1):35.
- Sánchez Almeida, J., Márquez, I., Bonet, J. A., Domínguez Cerdeña, I., and Muller, R. (2004). Bright Points in the Internetwork Quiet Sun. The Astrophysical Journal, 609(2):L91–L94.
- Schlüter, A. and Temesváry, S. (1958). The Internal Constitution of Sunspots. In Lehnert, B., editor, Electromagnetic Phenomena in Cosmical Physics, volume 6 of IAU Symposium, page 263.
- Shelyag, S., Fedun, V., and Erdélyi, R. (2008). Magnetohydrodynamic code for gravitationally-stratified media. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 486(2):655–662.
- Shelyag, S., Fedun, V., Erdélyi, R., Keenan, F. P., and Mathioudakis, M. (2012). Vortices in the Solar Photosphere. In Rimmele, T. R., Tritschler, A., Wöger, F., Collados Vera, M., Socas-Navarro, H., Schlichenmaier, R., Carlsson, M., Berger, T., Cadavid, A., Gilbert, P. R., Goode, P. R., and Knölker, M., editors, Second ATST-EAST Meeting: Magnetic Fields from the Photosphere to the Corona., volume 463 of Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series, page 107.
- Shelyag, S., Khomenko, E., de Vicente, A., and Przybylski, D. (2016). Heating of the partially ionized solar chromosphere by waves in magnetic structures. ArXiv e-prints.
- Shelyag, S., Schussler, M., Solanki, S. K., Berdyugina, S. V., and Vogler, A. (2004). G-band spectral synthesis and diagnostics of simulated solar magneto-convection. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 427(1):335–343.
- Soler, R., Oliver, R., and Ballester, J. L. (2010). Time damping of non-adiabatic magnetohydrodynamic waves in a partially ionized prominence plasma: effect of helium. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 512:A28.
- The Astropy Collaboration, Robitaille, T. P., Tollerud, E. J., Greenfield, P., Droettboom, M., Bray, E., Aldcroft, T., Davis, M., Ginsburg, A., Price-Whelan, A. M., Kerzendorf, W. E., Conley, A., Crighton, N., Barbary, K., Muna, D., Ferguson, H., Grollier, F., Parikh, M. M., Nair, P. H., Günther, H. M., Deil, C., Woillez, J., Conseil,S., Kramer, R., Turner, J. E. H., Singer, L., Fox, R., Weaver, B. A., Zabalza, V., Edwards, Z. I., Azalee Bostroem, K., Burke, D. J., Casey, A. R., Crawford, S. M., Dencheva, N., Ely, J., Jenness, T., Labrie, K., Lim, P. L., Pierfederici, F., Pontzen, A., Ptak, A., Refsdal, B., Servillat, M., and Streicher, O. (2013). Astropy: A community Python package for astronomy. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 558:A33.
- The SunPy Community, Mumford, S. J., Christe, S., Pérez-Suárez, D., Ireland, J., Shih, A. Y., Inglis, A. R., Liedtke, S., Hewett, R. J., Mayer, F., Hughitt, K., Freij, N., Meszaros, T., Bennett, S. M., Malocha, M., Evans, J., Agrawal, A., Leonard, A. J., Robitaille, T. P., Mampaey, B., Campos-Rozo, J. I., and Kirk, M. S. (2015). SunPy—Python for Solar Physics. Computational Science & Discovery,8(1):014009.
- Thompson, W. T. (2006). Coordinate systems for solar image data. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 449(2):791–803.
- Tóth, G. (1996). A General Code for Modeling Mhd Flows on Parallel Computers Versatile Advection Code. Astrophysical Letters and Communications, 34:245.
- Turk, M. J., Smith, B. D., Oishi, J. S., Skory, S., Skillman, S. W., Abel, T., and Norman, M. L. (2011). yt: A Multi-Code Analysis Toolkit for Astrophysical Simulation Data. The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 192(1):9.
- Utz, D., Jurčák, J., Hanslmeier, A., Muller, R., Veronig, A., and Kühner, O. (2013). Magnetic field strength distribution of magnetic bright points inferred from filtergrams and spectro-polarimetric data. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 554:A65.
- van der Walt, S., Schönberger, J. L., Nunez-Iglesias, J., Boulogne, F., Warner, J. D., Yager, N., Gouillart, E., and Yu, T. (2014). scikit-image: image processing in Python. PeerJ, 2:e453.
- Vecchio, A., Cauzzi, G., Reardon, K. P., Janssen, K., and Rimmele, T. (2007). Solar atmospheric oscillations and the chromospheric magnetic topology. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 461(1):L1–L4.
- Vernazza, J. E., Avrett, E. H., and Loeser, R. (1981). Structure of the solar chromosphere. III - Models of the EUV brightness components of the quiet-sun.The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 45:635.
- Wedemeyer, S., Scullion, E., Steiner, O., Rodriguez, J. d. l. C., and van der Voort, L. R. (2013). Magnetic tornadoes and chromospheric swirls – Definition and classification. Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 440:012005.
- Wedemeyer-Böhm, S. and Rouppe van der Voort, L. (2009). Small-scale swirl events in the quiet Sun chromosphere. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 507(1):L9–L12.
- Wedemeyer-Böhm, S., Scullion, E., Steiner, O., van der Voort, L. R., de la Cruz Rodriguez, J., Fedun, V., and Erdélyi, R. (2012). Magnetic tornadoes as energy channels into the solar corona. Nature, 486(7404):505–508.
- Zaqarashvili, T. V. and Erdélyi, R. (2009). Oscillations and Waves in Solar Spicules. Space Science Reviews, 149(1-4):355–388.
- Zaqarashvili, T. V., Khodachenko, M. L., and Rucker, H. O. (2011). Damping of Alfvén waves in solar partially ionized plasmas: effect of neutral helium in multi-fluid approach. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 534:A93.