4.7 Article

NON-WKB MODELS OF THE FIRST IONIZATION POTENTIAL EFFECT: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOLAR CORONAL HEATING AND THE CORONAL HELIUM AND NEON ABUNDANCES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 695, Issue 2, Pages 954-969

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/695/2/954

Keywords

Sun: abundances; Sun: chromosphere; turbulence; waves

Funding

  1. NASA [NNG05HL39I]
  2. Office of Naval Research

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We revisit in more detail a model for element abundance fractionation in the solar chromosphere that gives rise to the first ionization potential (FIP) effect in the solar corona and wind. Elements with first ionization potential below about 10 eV, i.e., those that are predominantly ionized in the chromosphere, are enriched in the corona by a factor of 3-4. We model the propagation of Alfven waves through the chromosphere using a non-WKB treatment, and evaluate the ponderomotive force associated with these waves. Under solar conditions, this is generally pointed upward in the chromosphere, and enhances the abundance of chromospheric ions in the corona. Our new approach captures the essentials of the solar coronal abundance anomalies, including the depletion of He relative to H, and also the putative depletion of Ne, recently discussed in the literature. We also argue that the FIP effect provides the strongest evidence to date for energy fluxes of Alfven waves sufficient to heat the corona. However, it appears that these waves must also be generated in the corona, in order to preserve the rather regular fractionation pattern without strong variations from loop to loop observed in the solar corona and slow-speed solar wind.

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