New techniques for the characterisation of dynamical phenomena in solar coronal images

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Phd, Solar, Corona, Cme, Waves

Scientific paper

During a total solar eclipse, a narrow strip of the Earth's surface is shielded completely by the Moon from the disk of the Sun. In this strip, the corona appears crown-like around the shade of the Moon. It was uncertain until the middle of the 20th century whether the corona was a solar phenomenon or if it was related to the Moon or whether it represented an artifact produced by the Earth's atmosphere. The answer to this question was provided by Grotrian (1939) and Edlèn (1942). Based on studies of iron emission lines, they suggested that the surface of the Sun is surrounded by a hot tenuous gas having a temperature of million degrees Kelvin and thus in a state of high ionization. This discovery was a result from spectroscopy, a field of research which started in 1666 with Sir Isaac Newton's observations of sunlight, dispersed by a prism.
It is now clear that the hot solar corona is made of a low density plasma, highly structured by the magnetic field on length scales ranging from the Sun's diameter to the limit of angular resolution (e.g. Démoulin and Klein 2000). The need to resolve and study the corona down to such scales has determined a vigorous scientific and technological impulse toward the development of solar Ultraviolet (UV) and X-ray telescopes with high spatial and temporal resolution. With the advent of the satellite SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, see chapter 1), the picture of a quiet corona was definitely sent to the past. EUV (Extreme UV) image sequences of the lower solar corona revealed a finely structured medium constantly agitated by a wide variety of transients (e.g. Harrison 1998). Active regions consisting of large magnetic loops with enhanced temperature and density are observed, as well as "quiet" areas, coronal holes and numerous structures of different scales such as plumes, jets, spicules, X-ray bright points, blinkers, all structured by magnetic fields. Launched in 1998, the Transition Region And Coronal Explorer (TRACE) was an important step on the way to subarcsecond telescopes. It allows a spatial resolution of 1" in the EUV and UV bands and, simultaneously, a temporal resolution of the order of a few seconds.
Coronal physics studies are dominated by two major and interlinked problems: coronal heating and solar wind acceleration. Above the chromosphere there is a thin transition layer in which the temperature suddenly increases and density drops. How can the temperature of the solar corona be three orders of magnitude higher than the temperature of the photosphere? In order for this huge temperature gradient to be stationary, non-thermal energy must be transported from below the photosphere towards the chromosphere and corona and converted into heat to balance the radiative and conductive losses. This puzzle of origin, transport and conversion of energy is referred to as the "coronal heating problem". Due to its fundamental role in the structuring of the corona, the magnetic field is supposed to play an important role in the heating.
In this dissertation we describe two aspects of solar coronal dynamics: waves in coronal loops (Part I) and coronal mass ejections (Part II). We investigate the influence of (semi-) automated techniques on solar coronal research. This is a timely discussion since the observation of solar phenomena is transitioning from manual detection to "Solar Image Processing". Our results are mainly based on images from the Extreme UV Imaging Telescope (EIT) and the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO), two instruments onboard the satellite SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) of which we recently celebrated its 11th anniversary. The high quality of the images together with the long timespan created a valuable database for solar physics research.
Part I reports on the first detection of slow magnetoacoustic waves in transequatorial coronal loops observed in high cadence image sequences simultaneously produced by EIT and TRACE (Transition Region And Coronal Explorer). Ten years of EUV observations made it clear that these disturbances are a widespread phenomenon in active region loops. The existence of these waves in the corona had been predicted by the theory of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD), which we revise briefly. Just like in helioseismology, coronal seismology uses observations of oscillations to derive physical parameters which are not directly measurable, such as the Alfvén speed or the magnetic field strength. The comparison with helioseismology does not fully hold in the sense that the dense photosphere does not allow any seeing inside. Instead, for the corona we do have direct observations, but because of its optical thinness these observations leave space for many interpretations.
At the end of the forties, it was suggested that the corona could be heated by the dissipation of acoustic waves (sound waves) driven by the p-mode oscillations, generated by turbulence in the convection zone. While they travel upwards, these waves form shocks and heat the plasma by viscous dissipation. Nowadays, they are believed to be only important for lower chromospheric heating. By the time the upper chromosphere is reached, the acoustic waves are heavily damped and what rests is reflected by the steep temperature and density gradients in the transition zone. As such, they cannot deposit enough energy in the corona to sufficiently heat it to the observed temperatures. Dissipation of magnetic energy by Alfvén waves or directly by the reconnection process in current sheets are considered to be more likely to heat the corona.
Part II addresses the question of detecting coronal mass ejections (CMEs) in coronagraphic white light data. The study of CMEs is a rather young (≲ 30 years) field of research. Coronal mass ejections are sudden expulsions of mass and magnetic field from the solar corona into the interplanetary medium. A classical CME carries away some 10^15 g of coronal mass and can liberate energies of 10^23-10^25 J. They are often observed n association with low coronal activity, such as flares and filament eruptions. During the first years of CME observation, it was believed that a flare was a necessary condition for CME occurrence. The widely accepted picture today is that flares and CMEs are both different manifestations of magnetic field restructuring through reconnection (flare) and the expulsion of mass (CME). Up till now, the SOHO mission has been the best mission for CME studies because of the increased resolution, cadence, sensitivity and dynamic range of the LASCO instruments, but also because of the large array of ground-based instruments (Howard 2006). The complexity of the CME-picture grew likewise. The next mission with a coronagraph is the NASA STEREO mission (Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory), launched on 26 Oct. 2006.
In chapter 4 we test the possibility of automatically detecting CMEs in LASCO data. We describe the algorithm CACTus (Computer Aided CME Tracking) and test its validity on a short period of 6 days. In chapter 5 we present our newly constructed CME catalog based on our automated detection scheme. It is the first automatically generated catalog which runs over a complete solar cycle (cycle 23). It required no human interaction, which implies it is totally objective. It includes all transients obeying the observational definition of CME as a "new, discrete, bright, white-light feature in the coronagraph field-of-view moving radially outward" (Hundhausen et al. 1984). As a result, our catalog contains much more events, mostly narrow, than are included in the classical CDAW CME catalog (Yashiro et al. 2004) which is assembled manually. We discuss the CME rate over the solar cycle and present important new statistics on the CACTus CME parameters (size, latitude, speed).
CME research has gained an increased interest due to their strong space weather impact. Space weather is defined by the European Space Agency (ESA) 1 as the "conditions on the Sun and in the solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere and thermosphere that can influence the performance and reliability of space-bo

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