UV spectra, bombs, and the solar atmosphere

Abstract

A recent analysis of UV data from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph IRIS reports plasma "bombs" with temperatures near within the solar photosphere. This is a curious result, firstly because most bomb plasma pressures p (the largest reported case exceeds 103 dyn~cm-2) fall well below photospheric pressures (> 7×103), and secondly, UV radiation cannot easily escape from the photosphere. In the present paper the IRIS data is independently analyzed. I find that the bombs arise from plasma originally at pressures between 80 and 800 dyne~cm-2 before explosion, i.e. between 850 and 550 km above τ500=1. This places the phenomenon's origin in the low-mid chromosphere or above. I suggest that bomb spectra are more compatible with Alfv\'enic turbulence than with bi-directional reconnection jets.

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