The Hydromagnetic Interior of a Solar Quiescent Prominence. I. Coupling between Force-balance and Steady Energy-transport
Abstract
This series of papers investigates the dynamic interior of a quiescent prominence revealed by recent Hinode and SDO/AIA high-resolution observations. This first paper is a study of the static equilibrium of the Kippenhahn-Schl\"uter diffuse plasma slab, suspended vertically in a bowed magnetic field, under the frozen-in condition and subject to a theoretical thermal balance among an optically-thin radiation, heating, and field-aligned thermal conduction. The everywhere-analytical solutions to this nonlinear problem are an extremely restricted subset of the physically admissible states of the system. For most values of the total mass frozen into a given bowed field, force-balance and steady energy-transport cannot both be met without a finite fraction of the total mass having collapsed into a cold sheet of zero thickness, within which the frozen-in condition must break down. An exact, resistive hydromagnetic extension of the Kippenhahn-Schl\"uter slab is also presented, resolving the mass-sheet singularity into a finite-thickness layer of steadily-falling dense fluid. Our hydromagnetic result suggests that the narrow, vertical prominence Hα threads may be falling across magnetic fields, with optically-thick cores much denser and ionized to much lower degrees than conventionally considered. This implication is discussed in relation to (i) the recent SDO/AIA observations of quiescent prominences that are massive and yet draining mass everywhere in their interiors, (ii) the canonical range of 5-60 G determined from spectral-polarimetric observations of prominence magnetic fields over the years and (iii) the need for a more realistic multi-fluid treatment.
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