4.7 Article

TIME DEPENDENT NONEQUILIBRIUM IONIZATION OF TRANSITION REGION LINES OBSERVED WITH IRIS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 817, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/817/1/46

Keywords

line: profiles; shock waves; Sun: atmosphere; Sun: chromosphere; Sun: transition region

Funding

  1. NASA [NNX11AN98G, NNM12AB40P, NNM07AA01C]
  2. IRIS [NNG09FA40C]
  3. Research Council of Norway
  4. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)/ERC [291058]
  5. High End Computing (HEC) division of NASA [s1061]
  6. Research Council of Norway [170935/V30]

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The properties of nonstatistical equilibrium ionization of silicon and oxygen ions are analyzed in this work. We focus on five solar targets (quiet Sun; coronal hole; plage; quiescent active region, AR; and flaring AR) as observed with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). IRIS is best suited for this work owing to the high cadence (up to 0.5 s), high spatial resolution (up to 0 32), and high signal-to-noise ratios for O IV lambda 1401. and Si lambda 1402. We find that the observed intensity ratio between lines of three times ionized silicon and oxygen ions depends on their total intensity and that this correlation varies depending on the region observed (quiet Sun, coronal holes, plage, or active regions) and on the specific observational objects present (spicules, dynamic loops, jets, microflares, or umbra). In order to interpret the observations, we compare them with synthetic profiles taken from 2D self-consistent radiative MHD simulations of the solar atmosphere, where the statistical equilibrium or nonequilibrium treatment of silicon and oxygen is applied. These synthetic observations show vaguely similar correlations to those. in the observations, i.e., between the intensity ratios and their intensities, but only in the nonequilibrium case do we find that (some of) the observations can be reproduced. We conclude that these lines are formed out of statistical equilibrium. We use our time-dependent nonequilibrium ionization simulations to describe the physical mechanisms behind these observed properties.

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