Thermal bremsstrahlung from the X-ray observed plasma accounts for most of the observed 9.1 cm emission from McMath 12336, an old, spotless active region, on June 2, 1973. This implies that only a small fraction of the emission measure within the active region is in the range around 106 K and below.
Morphology and spatial distribution of XUV and X-ray emissions in an active region observed from Skylab
✍ Scribed by Chung-Chieh Cheng; J. B. Smith; E. Tandberg-Hanssen
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 622 KB
- Volume
- 67
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0038-0938
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✦ Synopsis
We studied the morphology and spatial distribution of loops in an active region, using coordinated observations obtained with both the S082A XUV spectroheliograph and the S056 grazingincidence X-ray telescope on Skylab. The active region loops in the temperature range 5 • 105-3 • 106 K fall basically into two distinctive groups: the hot loops with temperatures 2-3 • 106K as observed in coronal lines and X-rays, and the relatively cool loops with temperature 5 • 105-1 • 10 6 K as observed in transition-zone lines (Ne vii, Mg Ix). The brightest hot coronal loops in the active region are mostly low-lying, compact, closely-packed, and show greater stability than the transition-zone loops, which are fewer in number, large, and slender. The observed aspect ratio of the hot coronal loops is in the range of 0.1 and 0.2, which are almost two orders of magnitude larger than those for the Ne vii loops. Brief discussion of the MHD stability of the loops in terms of the aspect ratio is presented.
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