A qualitative interpretation of 7 August 1972 impulsive phase flare Hα line profiles
✍ Scribed by Richard C. Canfield
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 775 KB
- Volume
- 75
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0038-0938
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Tanaka's (1977)
unique Ha profiles of the kernels of the 7 August 1972 flare were quantitatively interpreted by Brown et al. (1978; henceforth BCR) in terms of a thick target electron beam model. They found that this interpretation required beam inhomogeneity and/or partial precipation and large (60-100 km s -1) macroturbulence. The latter requirement is somewhat suspect, since the only independent evidence also comes from efforts to understand the profiles of optically thick chromospheric lines. Relationships between model atmosphere parameters and line profile parameters calculated by Dinh (1980) show that these requirements could be considerably reduced, if not totally eliminated, if the actual chromospheric flare heating mechanism were simultaneously capable of pushing the flare transition region to greater column density and causing less heating of the residual chromosphere than the BCR models. This then implies that the chromosphere is heated primarily by a mechanism through which the heating effects do not penetrate as far below the flare transition region as is the case for a power-law spectrum of non-thermal electrons whose parameters are chosen appropriate to the nonthermal thick target interpretation of hard X-rays. Thermal conduction and optically thick radiation are examples of such a mechanism.