Solar and Magnetospheric Plasmas: Theory and Application
Lead Research Organisation:
University of St Andrews
Department Name: Mathematics and Statistics
Abstract
The Solar and Magnetospheric Theory Group (SMTG) of the University of St Andrews will work on the fundamental physical processes occurring in the Sun's atmosphere and the terrestrial magnetosphere to address the key STFC Roadmap question "How does the Sun influence the environment of the Earth and the rest of the Solar System?" In particular, the proposed work addresses questions, such as:
i) How do magnetic fields emerging from below the solar surface release energy when interacting with the solar atmosphere?
ii) Why is the Sun's outer atmosphere (the corona) over 100 times hotter than its visible surface?
iii) How do multiscale processes in the solar surface affect the evolution of the Sun's global magnetic field and when it becomes unstable?
iv) Can we use physics-based modelling techniques to predict solar eruptions and their effect on Earth?
v) What causes the observed waves in the Earth's magnetosphere and how can models be used to improve our interpretation of magnetospheric observations ?
Finding answers to these key questions calls for a range of expertise. The SMTG is excellently positioned to answer these questions, since we study a wide variety of physical phenomena using a combination of fundamental theory, analytical models, computer simulations, forward modelling and observations. This mixture of detailed modelling and comparison with observations from several satellite missions is essential to make progress.
The topics we will investigate, using plasma theory, are:
i) the complex interplay of magnetic flux emergence, reconnection and particle acceleration,
ii) the physical mechanisms responsible for keeping the solar atmosphere much hotter than the solar surface (atmospheric heating),
iii) the evolution of the structure and stability of the global coronal magnetic field,
iv) the development of physics-based and data-driven methods to predict solar eruptions,
v) the coupling of MHD waves in 3D nonuniform media.
These phenomena obey physical laws that can be expressed as a set of non-linear partial differential equations. However, what makes them distinct is that different phenomena require different dominant terms. Hence, the physical processes and the plasma response will be different in each case. For example, magnetic reconnection requires electrical resistance, but MHD waves in general do not. Gravity is important in flux emergence and prominence formation, but for magnetic reconnection it is not. Particle acceleration in solar flares may require a particle description, while many of the others research areas do not. It is the rich complexity of the non-linear equations that makes them hard to solve and to determine which key physical processes are responsible for each event. In order to solve these complex equations, we need a very important research tool, namely High Performance Computing. A research problem can be split up into smaller parts that are run on different processors at the same time (in parallel). Hence, with multiple processors a job that would require many years on a single processor, will be completed in a few weeks.
We address key issues in the STFC Science Roadmap. However, a detailed understanding of the physics of our research topics are important not only for the Sun, solar-like stars and space weather, but also for understanding a range of diverse astrophysical processes such as star formation in giant molecular clouds, the evolution of astrophysical discs around stars, black holes and in Active Galactic Nuclei, and the physics of winds and outflows from stellar to extragalactic scales.
i) How do magnetic fields emerging from below the solar surface release energy when interacting with the solar atmosphere?
ii) Why is the Sun's outer atmosphere (the corona) over 100 times hotter than its visible surface?
iii) How do multiscale processes in the solar surface affect the evolution of the Sun's global magnetic field and when it becomes unstable?
iv) Can we use physics-based modelling techniques to predict solar eruptions and their effect on Earth?
v) What causes the observed waves in the Earth's magnetosphere and how can models be used to improve our interpretation of magnetospheric observations ?
Finding answers to these key questions calls for a range of expertise. The SMTG is excellently positioned to answer these questions, since we study a wide variety of physical phenomena using a combination of fundamental theory, analytical models, computer simulations, forward modelling and observations. This mixture of detailed modelling and comparison with observations from several satellite missions is essential to make progress.
The topics we will investigate, using plasma theory, are:
i) the complex interplay of magnetic flux emergence, reconnection and particle acceleration,
ii) the physical mechanisms responsible for keeping the solar atmosphere much hotter than the solar surface (atmospheric heating),
iii) the evolution of the structure and stability of the global coronal magnetic field,
iv) the development of physics-based and data-driven methods to predict solar eruptions,
v) the coupling of MHD waves in 3D nonuniform media.
These phenomena obey physical laws that can be expressed as a set of non-linear partial differential equations. However, what makes them distinct is that different phenomena require different dominant terms. Hence, the physical processes and the plasma response will be different in each case. For example, magnetic reconnection requires electrical resistance, but MHD waves in general do not. Gravity is important in flux emergence and prominence formation, but for magnetic reconnection it is not. Particle acceleration in solar flares may require a particle description, while many of the others research areas do not. It is the rich complexity of the non-linear equations that makes them hard to solve and to determine which key physical processes are responsible for each event. In order to solve these complex equations, we need a very important research tool, namely High Performance Computing. A research problem can be split up into smaller parts that are run on different processors at the same time (in parallel). Hence, with multiple processors a job that would require many years on a single processor, will be completed in a few weeks.
We address key issues in the STFC Science Roadmap. However, a detailed understanding of the physics of our research topics are important not only for the Sun, solar-like stars and space weather, but also for understanding a range of diverse astrophysical processes such as star formation in giant molecular clouds, the evolution of astrophysical discs around stars, black holes and in Active Galactic Nuclei, and the physics of winds and outflows from stellar to extragalactic scales.
Publications
Gunár S
(2023)
On the Physical Nature of the so-Called Prominence Tornadoes
in Space Science Reviews
Takahashi K
(2023)
Polarization of Magnetospheric ULF Waves Excited by an Interplanetary Shock on 27 February 2014
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Sakurai T
(2022)
Poleward Moving Auroral Arcs and Pc5 Oscillations
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
De Pontieu B
(2022)
Probing the Physics of the Solar Atmosphere with the Multi-slit Solar Explorer (MUSE). I. Coronal Heating
in The Astrophysical Journal
Pascoe D
(2022)
Propagating Alfvén waves in open structures with random structuring
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Hartinger M
(2023)
Properties of Magnetohydrodynamic Normal Modes in the Earth's Magnetosphere
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Wright A
(2023)
Resonant Fast-Alfvén Wave Coupling in a 3D Coronal Arcade
in Physics
Reid J
(2023)
Self-consistent nanoflare heating in model active regions: MHD avalanches
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Reid J
(2023)
Self-consistent nanoflare heating in model active regions: MHD avalanches in curved coronal arcades
in Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
Allanson O
(2024)
The challenge to understand the zoo of particle transport regimes during resonant wave-particle interactions for given survey-mode wave spectra
in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences
| Title | Data for Figures - Davies & Wright, for submission to Earth and Space Science 2023 |
| Description | Data to reproduce figures from Davies and Wright for submission to Earth and Space Science 2023.Alfvén-Fast Wave Coupling in a 2D Non-Uniform Medium IDL Save files to reproduce these plots from the paper. Use the 'restore' command to read in the data. S1.mp4 is the movie included in the paper's supporting information. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Not applicable, dataset linked to research publication |
| URL | https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_for_Figures_-_Davies_Wright_for_submission_to_JGR_Space_P... |
| Title | Data for Wright, Elsden - 2023 - Resonant Fast-Alfven wave coupling in a 3-D Coronal Arcade |
| Description | IDL save file containing slices of the data used to make the publication figures. Use the 'restore' command to read in the data. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Not appplicable, dataset linked to publication |
| URL | https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_for_Wright_Elsden_-_2023_-_Resonant_Fast-Alfven_wave_coup... |
| Title | Data underpinning: Self-consistent nanoflare heating in model active regions: MHD avalanches |
| Description | |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/datasets/data-underpinning-selfconsistent-nanoflare-heatin... |
| Title | The coupled tearing-thermal instability in coronal current sheets: data |
| Description | This dataset contains a selection of the Legolas and MPI-AMRVAC data analysed in De Jonghe & Sen (2024). "The coupled tearing-thermal instability in coronal current sheets from the linear to the non-linear stage", accepted for publication in MNRAS, and available in preprint at arXiv:2412.07427. Details and data description available in README.txt |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2024 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.13866260 |
| Title | The coupled tearing-thermal instability in coronal current sheets: data |
| Description | This dataset contains a selection of the Legolas and MPI-AMRVAC data analysed in De Jonghe & Sen (2024). "The coupled tearing-thermal instability in coronal current sheets from the linear to the non-linear stage", accepted for publication in MNRAS, and available in preprint at arXiv:2412.07427. Details and data description available in README.txt |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2024 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.13866259 |
| Description | ISSI Team: Magnetohydrostatic Modeling of the Solar Atmosphere with New Datasets |
| Organisation | Chinese Academy of Sciences |
| Department | National Space Science Centre |
| Country | China |
| Sector | Public |
| PI Contribution | We are contributing expertise and software regarding the use of analytical magnetohydrostatic models for magnetic field extrapolation to this collaboration. |
| Collaborator Contribution | They are contributing expertise and software regarding computional magnetohydrostatic models for magnetic field extrapolation. |
| Impact | Zhu, X., Neukirch, T. and Wiegelmann, T., Magnetohydrostatic modeling of the solar atmosphere, Science China Technological Science 65, 1710 (2022) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | ISSI Team: Magnetohydrostatic Modeling of the Solar Atmosphere with New Datasets |
| Organisation | Max Planck Society |
| Department | Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research |
| Country | Germany |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | We are contributing expertise and software regarding the use of analytical magnetohydrostatic models for magnetic field extrapolation to this collaboration. |
| Collaborator Contribution | They are contributing expertise and software regarding computional magnetohydrostatic models for magnetic field extrapolation. |
| Impact | Zhu, X., Neukirch, T. and Wiegelmann, T., Magnetohydrostatic modeling of the solar atmosphere, Science China Technological Science 65, 1710 (2022) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
