Buch, Englisch, 261 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 594 g
A Rosetta Stone for Electrodynamic Coupling in Cosmic Plasmas
Buch, Englisch, 261 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 594 g
Reihe: Astrophysics and Space Science Library
ISBN: 978-3-031-46272-6
Verlag: Springer
This book reflects on 8 decades of research on one of the longest-standing unsolved problems in modern astrophysics: why does the Sun form a hot corona? The authors give a critical overview of the field and offer suggestions on how to bridge the chasm between what we can measure, and what we can calculate. They go back to basics to explain why the problem is difficult, where we have made progress and where we have not, to help the next generation of scientists devise novel techniques to crack such a long-lasting problem. A way forward is formulated centered around refutation, using Bayesian methods to propose and to try to reject hypotheses and models, and avoiding seduction by ``confirmation bias’’.
This book is aimed at physicists, students and researchers interested in understanding, learning from and solving the coronal heating problem, in an era of new dedicated facilities such as the Parker Solar Probe and the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope.
The book will appeal to those interested in understanding research methods and how they are changing in the modern academic environment, particular in astrophysics and Earth sciences where remote sensing is essential.
Zielgruppe
Graduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface
1 Introduction
1.1 This book in a nutshell
1.2 Hot plasmas and electrodynamic coupling
1.3 An old puzzle
1.4 A very short history
1.5 Reductio ad minimum
1.6 First inferences
1.7 The nature of the heating problem
1.8 One Sun, multiple coronae
Chapter summary
2 Magneto-hydrodynamics
2.1 Underlying assumptions, for better and worse
2.2 Ideal MHD
2.3 Equations of motion
2.4 Coronal magnetism and topology
2.5 Flux freezing and a useful one-dimensional picture
2.6 Electrodynamic coupling
2.7 Two conjectures
Chapter summary
3 Challenges
3.1 Disparate scales, diverse regimes
3.2 Navigating the chromosphere
3.3 Remote sensing
3.4 Stochastic behavior
3.5 Turbulence
3.6 Theoretical and numerical challenges
3.7 Ill-posedness
3.8 Changing the scene of the crime
3.9 The poorly understood chromosphere-corona interface
Chapter summary
4 Methodologies
4.1 Is there a heating problem?
4.2 Is there a coronal heating problem?
4.3 Methods addressing the coronal heating problem
4.4 Refutation of non-magnetic processes
4.5 Accelerated particles do not heat the quiet corona
4.6 Resonant absorption: an ideal linear model
4.7 Parker’s fundamental theorem of magnetostatics
4.8 Nanoflares
4.9 From MHD to dissipation
4.10 Philosophical considerations
Chapter summary
5 Seeking the Sun’s Achilles heels
5.1 Power spectra and MHD turbulence
5.2 Scales of dissipation and the narrowest coronal structures
5.3 “Fuzziness” of hot plasma loops
5.4 Is coronal thermal structure unreasonably well-organized?
5.5 Coronal oscillations
5.6 Why are only some magnetic loops loaded with dense, bright plasma?
5.7 Clues from transient changes
5.8 Stable or unstable current sheets?
5.9 High signal-to-noise coronal line profiles
5.10 Waves in inhomogeneous plasmas
5.11 Remote sensing of kinetic coronal physics
5.12 Trouble with “the transition region”
Chapter summary
6 Fresh approaches
6.1 A perspective on methodologies
6.2 How does the chromosphere control coronal physics?
6.3 Novel instrumentation
Chapter summary
Appendices
7 Closing thoughts




