Frequencies of Flare Occurrence: Interaction between Convection and Coronal Loops
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Mullan, D. J. and R. R. Paudel. Frequencies of Flare Occurrence: Interaction between Convection and Coronal Loops. The Astrophysical Journal 854 (Feb. 7, 2018), no. 1.
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© 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved
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Abstract
Observations of solar and stellar flares have revealed the presence of power law dependences between
the flare energy and the time interval between flares. Various models have been proposed to explain
these dependences, and to explain the numerical value of the power law indices. Here, we propose a
model in which convective flows in granules force the foot-points of coronal magnetic loops, which are
frozen-in to photospheric gas, to undergo a random walk. In certain conditions, this can lead to a twist in
the loop, which drives the loop unstable if the twist exceeds a critical value. The possibility that a solar
flare is caused by such a twist-induced instability in a loop has been in the literature for decades. Here,
we quantify the process in an approximate way with a view to replicating the power-law index. We find
that, for relatively small flares, the random walk twisting model leads to a rather steep power law slope
which agrees very well with the index derived from a sample of 56,000+ solar X-ray flares reported by
the GOES satellites. For relatively large flares, we find that the slope of the power law is shallower. The
empirical power law slopes reported for flare stars also have a range which overlaps with the slopes
obtained here. We suggest that in the coolest stars, a significant change in slope should occur when the
frozen-flux assumption breaks down due to low electrical conductivity.
