Physics
Scientific paper
Jul 1972
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1972ssrv...13..455f&link_type=abstract
Space Science Reviews, Volume 13, Issue 3, pp.455-483
Physics
2
Scientific paper
Our present knowledge on the average physical properties of the chromosphere and of the transition region between chromosphere and corona is reviewed. It is recalled that shock wave dissipation is responsible for the high temperatures observed in the chromosphere and corona and that, due to the non-linear character of the dissipation mechanism, no satisfactory explanation of the structure of the outer solar layers has yet been given. In this paper, the main emphasis is on the observations and their interpretation. Evidence for the non-spherically symmetric structure of the atmosphere is given; the validity of interpreting the observations with the help of a fictitious spherically symmetric atmosphere is discussed. The chromosphere and the transition region are studied separately: for each region, the energy balance is considered and recent homogeneous models derived from ultra-violet, infrared and radio observations are discussed. It is stressed that although in the chromosphere, a study of the radiative losses may lead to the determination, as function of height, of the amount of mechanical energy dissipated as function of height, a more detailed analysis of the velocity field is necessary to find the periods and the wavelengths of the waves responsible for the heating. The methods used for wave detection and some results are presented. Observational and theoretical evidence is given for the non-validity of the assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium which is commonly used in modeling the transition region. We conclude that a better understanding of the heating mechanism will come through a higher spatial resolution (less than 0.2″) and more accurate absolute measurements, rather than from sophisticated hydrodynamical calculations.
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