4.6 Article

Extension and validation of the pendulum model for longitudinal solar prominence oscillations

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 660, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202142907

Keywords

Sun; corona; Sun; filaments; prominences; Sun; magnetic fields; Sun; oscillations

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [RYC2018-026129-I]
  2. Spanish National Research Agency (Agencia Estatal de Investigacion)
  3. European Social Fund through Operational Program FSE 2014 of Employment, Education and Training
  4. Universitat de les Illes Balears
  5. MCIN/AEI [PID2020-112791GB-I00]
  6. NASA's H-ISFM program
  7. International Space Sciences Institute (ISSI) via team 413 on Large-Amplitude Oscillations as a Probe of Quiescent and Erupting Solar Prominences

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The aim of this study is to understand the effects of nonuniform solar gravity on longitudinal oscillations and explore the validity of the pendulum model with different flux-tube geometries. The study finds that nonuniform gravity significantly modifies the pendulum model and introduces a cutoff period for longitudinal oscillations. Additionally, the study concludes that the corrected pendulum model is still valid for noncircular dips and is important for prominence seismology.
Context. Longitudinal oscillations in prominences are common phenomena on the Sun. These oscillations can be used to infer the geometry and intensity of the filament magnetic field. Previous theoretical studies of longitudinal oscillations made two simplifying assumptions: uniform gravity and semicircular dips on the supporting flux tubes. However, the gravity is not uniform and realistic dips are not semicircular. Aims. Our aim is to understand the effects of including the nonuniform solar gravity on longitudinal oscillations and explore the validity of the pendulum model with different flux-tube geometries. Methods. We first derived the equation describing the motion of the plasma along the flux tube including the effects of nonuniform gravity, yielding corrections to the original pendulum model. We also computed the full numerical solutions for the normal modes and compared them with the new pendulum approximation. Results. We find that the nonuniform gravity introduces a significant modification in the pendulum model. We also found a cut-off period; i.e., the longitudinal oscillations cannot have a period longer than 167 min. In addition, considering different tube geometries, the period depends almost exclusively on the radius of curvature at the bottom of the dip. Conclusions. We conclude that nonuniform gravity significantly modifies the pendulum model. These corrections are important for prominence seismology, because the inferred values of the radius of curvature and minimum magnetic-field strength differ substantially from those of the old model. However, we find that the corrected pendulum model is quite robust and is still valid for noncircular dips.

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