Numerical MHD modelling of waves in solar coronal loops

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Numerical MHD modelling of waves in solar coronal loops. Petr Jel ínek 1 ,2 and Marian Karlický 2. 1 University of South Bohemia, Department of Physics České Budějovice , Czech Republic 2 Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Ondřejov , Czech Republic. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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  • Numerical MHD modelling of waves in solar coronal loopsPetr Jelnek1,2 and Marian Karlick21University of South Bohemia, Department of Physicsesk Budjovice, Czech Republic

    2Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Ondejov, Czech Republic

  • esk Budjovicehttp://www.c-budejovice.cz/czSmall university town in the South of Bohemia with 100 000 inhabi-tants

    Approximately 200 km from Wien and 100 km from Linz University of South Bohemia 7 faculties and 2 research institutes, about 12 000 students http://www.jcu.cz/

  • Ondejovhttp://www.asu.cas.cz/Small village outlying 30 km from Prague http://www.obecondrejov.cz/

    Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

    Founded in 1898, 4 main scientific departments

  • OutlineMotivation of numerical studies

    Equations of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)

    Numerical methods & solutions

    Results1D model impulsively generated acoustic waves1D model gravitational stratification2D model impulsively generated acoustic waves2D model modelling of wavetrains

    Conclusions

  • Motivation of numerical studies I.Oscillations in solar coronal loops have been observed for a few decades

    The importance of such oscillations lies in their potential for the diagnostics of solar coronal structure (magnetic field, gas density, etc.)The various oscillation modes in coronal loops were observed with highly sensitive instruments such as SUMER (SoHO), TRACE

    The observed oscillations include propagating and slow magnetosonic waves. There are also observations of fast magnetosonic waves, kink and sausage modes of waves

  • Motivation of numerical studies II.Coronal loop oscillations were studied analytically but these studies are unfortunately applicable only onto highly idealised situations

    The numerical simulations are often used for solutions of more complex problems these studies are based on numerical solution of the full set of MHD equationsMentioned studies of coronal loop oscilla-tions are very important in connection with the problem of coronal heating, solar wind acceleration and many unsolved problems in solar physics

    Magnetohydrodynamic coronal seismology is one of the main reasons for studying wa-ves in solar corona

  • MHD equationsIn our models we describe plasma dynamics in a coronal loop by the ideal magnetohydrodynamic equationsThe plasma energy densityThe flux vector

  • Numerical solution of MHD equationsThe MHD equations (1) (4) are transformed into a conservation formFor the solution of the equations in conservation form exist many numerical algorithms including professional software such as NIRVANA, ATHENA, FLASH, .... (www.astro-sim.org)

  • Numerical methods I.There exist a lot of numerical methods used for the solution of equations in conservation form in numerical mathematics

    Generally we can use the two types of numerical methodsexplicit methods calculate the state of a system at a later time from the state of the system at the current time easy to programming unstable in many cases

    implicit methods find the solution by solving an equation involving both the current state of the system and the later one unconditionally stable difficult to programming (tridiagonal matrix; solution by Thomas algorithm)

  • Numerical methods II.We use only explicit methods in our calculations for this reason we must use the artificial smoothing for the stabilisation of the numerical scheme

    Some mathematical definitions of numerical methods for PDEsConsistency the numerical scheme is called consistent if

    Convergence the numerical method is called convergent if

  • Numerical methods III.For the solution of the MHD equations in a conservation form the methods of so-called flux limiters are used

    These numerical methods are able to jump down the oscillations near sharp discontinuities and jumps

    Generally, for the solution of PDE in conservation form in 1D we can write

  • Numerical methods IV.Many authors often use the linear methodsupwind scheme

    Lax-Wendroff scheme (downwind slope)

    Beam-Warming scheme (upwind slope)

    Fromm scheme (centered slope)

  • Numerical methods V.

  • Numerical methods VI.To avoid the overshoots we limit the slope by flux limiter methods minmod

    superbee

    MC

    van LeerAnd many others van Albada, OSPRE, UMIST, MUSCL schemes

  • Numerical methods VII.

  • 1D model of acoustic standing wavesThere exists a lot of types of oscillations in solar coronal loopacoustic oscillations kink and sausage oscillationsfast and slow propagating waves, ...

    Acoustic oscillations are easy to simulate, they can be modelled in 1D, without magnetic field, etc.

    Kink and sausage oscillations were directly observed (SOHO, TRACE) and there are many unanswered questions excitation and damping mechanisms, etc.

    We focused on the impulsively generated acoustic standing waves in coronal loops

  • 1D model initial conditionsInitial condtitionsThe length of the coronal loop was L = 50 Mm which corresponds to loop radius about 16 Mm.

    The loop footpoints were settled at positions x = 0 and x = L

  • 1D model perturbationsPerturbations

    In the view of our interest to study impulsively generated waves in the solar coronal loops, we have launched a pulse in the pressure and mass density

    The pulse had the following form

  • 1D model numerical solutionThe numerical region was covered by a uniform grid with 2 500 cells and open boundary conditions that allow a wave signal freely leave the region were applied

    The time step used in our calculations satisfied the Courant-Friedrichs-Levy stability condition in the formIn order to stabilize of numerical methods we have used the artificial smoothing as the replacing all the variables at each grid point and after each full time step as

  • Results 1D modelTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4,t), mass density r(x = L/4,t) (top panels) and spatial profiles of velocity v(x,Dt), v(x,7.12T1) (bottom panels); all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0 = L/4.

  • Results 1D modelTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4,t), mass density r(x = L/4,t) (top panels) and spatial profiles of velocity v(x,Dt), v(x,7.89T2) (bottom panels); all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0=L/2.

  • Results 1D modelTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4,t), mass density r(x = L/4,t) (top panels) and spatial profiles of velocity v(x,Dt), v(x,11.00T1) (bottom panels); all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0 = L/50.

  • Results 1D modelTime evolution of average pressure, increased by the factor 103, initial pulse position x0 = L/4 (left top panel), x0 = L/2 (right top panel) and x0 = L/50 (bottom panel), mass density contrast d = 108 and pulse width w = L/40; note that x-axis is in the logarithmic scale.

  • Results 1D modelFourier power spectra of velocities v for initial pulse position x0 = L/2 (left) and x0 = L/4 (right), mass density contrast d = 105 (top panels) and d = 108 (bottom panels) and pulse width w = L/40. The amplitude of the power spectrum A(P) is normalized to 1.

  • Results 1D model Time evolution of total (red), pressure (blue) and kinetic (green) energies for various positions in numerical box. Left upper panel whole simulation region, left upper panel transition region, bottom panel coronal region. The initial pulse position x0 = L/4, d = 108 and pulse width w = L/40.

  • Results 1D model Time evolution of total (red), pressure (blue) and kinetic (green) energies for various positions in numerical box. Left upper panel whole simulation region, left upper panel transition region, bottom panel coronal region. The initial pulse position x0 = L/2, d = 108 and pulse width w = L/40.

  • 1D gravitational stratificationTo create more realistic model the gravitational stratification was added

    We consider a semi-circular loop with the curvature radius RL, in this model we incorporate the effect of loop plane inclination the shift of circular loop centre from the baseline was omitted

  • 1D gravitational stratification I.The gravitational acceleration at a distance s measured from the footpoint along the loop, isThe MHD equation of motion has the following formFor the plasma pressure in the loop we can write

  • The temperature profile was calculated by means of this formula1D gravitational stratification II.The length of the coronal loop was L = 100 Mm in this case which corresponds to loop radius about 32 Mm.The mass density was calculated from

  • Gravitational stratification first results in 1DTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4,t), mass density contrast d = 102, pulse width w = L/80, and initial pulse position x0 = L/4 and x0 = L/2, inclination angle a = 0 (blue line) and a = 45 (red line).

  • 2D modelling of magnetoacoustic standing wavesWe consider a coronal slab with a width w = 1Mm and mass density ri, embedded in a environment of mass density reThe pressure, mass density, temperature and initial pulses in pressure and mass density are calculated similarly as in 1D model

  • Numerical solution in 2DFor the solution of 2D MHD equations the Lax-Wendroff numerical scheme was used, this method is often used for the solutions of MHD by many authorsStep 1Step 2The stability condition

  • Results 2D modelTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4, y = 0, t) (left top panel). Spatial profile of x-component of velocity vx at time t = 8.17 T1 (right top panel) and the corresponding slices of vx along y = H/2 (x = L/2) bottom left (right) panel; all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0 = L/2.

  • Results 2D modelTime evolution of velocity v(x = L/4, y = 0, t) (left top panel). Spatial profile of x-component of velocity vx at time t = 6.15 T2 (right top panel) and the corresponding slices of vx along y = H/2 (x = L/4) bottom left (right) panel; all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0 = L/4.

  • Modelling of wave trains in 2DThe wave trains were directly observed and discovered by SECIS (Solar Eclipse Coronal Imaging System)

    Observed in Ondrejov in radio waves

    The theoretical description is needed the comparison of observed and modelled tadpoles what type of waves are present

  • We study impulsively generated magnetoacoustic wave trains propagating along a coronal loop

    The problem is modelled by means of 2D model presented before, but magnetic field is parallel to the y axis

    The equilibrium is perturbed by a pulse in velocity, situated at L/4 of the numerical domainModelling of wave trains in 2D

  • Wave trains first results I.The spatial profile of the velocity vx at time t = 30 s from initial pulse (left upper panel), and corresponding slices of vx along x axis (y = H/2) (right upper panel) and along y axis (x = L/4). Initial pulse position x0 = L/4, mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40

  • Wave trains first results II.Time evolution of mass density r(x = L/2,t), (top panel) and corresponding wavelet analysis (bottom panel); all for mass density contrast d = 108, pulse width w = L/40, and initial pulse position x0 = L/4.

  • Conclusions I.Computer modelling seems to be very useful tool for the understan-ding of processes in solar coronal loops

    The next step in our research will be the extension of current model to three dimensions (by means of mentioned software Athena, Nirvana, FLASH...), including the source terms such as cooling term, heating term, gravitational stratification, etc.

    By means of this model we could investigate effects like attenuation of waves in coronal loops, plasma energy leakage by the dissipation into solar atmosphere and more very interesting problems in solar coronal physics...

  • More informations about 1D or 2D models can be found in

    Jelnek P., Karlick, M.: Numerical Modelling of Slow Standing Waves in a Solar Coronal Loop, Proc. 12th ESPM, Freiburg, Germany, 2008

    Jelnek, P., Karlick, M.: Computational Study of Implusively Generated Standing Slow Acoustic Waves in a Solar Coronal Loop, Eur. Phys. J. D, after revisions.Conclusions II.

  • References[1] M. Aschwanden, Physics of the Solar Corona (Springer, Praxis Publ., Chichester UK 2004).

    [2] T. J. Chung, Computational Fluid Dynamics (Cambridge University Press, New York USA 2002).

    [3] E. R. Priest, Solar Magnetohydrodynamics (D. Reidel Publishing Company, London England 1982).

    [4] M. Selwa, K. Murawski, S. K. Solanki, A&A 436, 701 (2005).

    [5] Tsiklauri, D., Nakariakov, V. M., A&A, 379, 1106 (2001).

    [6] Nakariakov, V. M. et al.: Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 349, 705 (2004).