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Chromospheric Heating by Acoustic Waves Compared to Radiative Cooling. II. Revised Grid of Models

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2020

Abstract

Acoustic and magnetoacoustic waves are considered to be possible agents of chromospheric heating. We present a comparison of deposited acoustic energy flux with total integrated radiative losses in the middle chromosphere of the quiet Sun and a weak plage.

The comparison is based on a consistent set of high-resolution observations acquired by the Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer instrument in the Ca II 854.2 nm line. The deposited acoustic-flux energy is derived from Doppler velocities observed in the line core and a set of 1737 non-local thermodynamic equilibrium 1D hydrostatic semi-empirical models, which also provide the radiative losses.

The models are obtained by scaling the temperature and column mass of five initial models by Vernazza et al. (1981; VAL) B-F to get the best fit of synthetic to observed profiles. We find that the deposited acoustic-flux energy in the quiet-Sun chromosphere balances 30%-50% of the energy released by radiation.

In the plage, it contributes by 50%-60% in locations with vertical magnetic field and 70%-90% in regions where the magnetic field is inclined more than 50 degrees to the solar surface normal.