Evolution of elemental abundances in hot active region cores from Chandrayaan-2 XSM observations

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dc.contributor.author Mondal, Biswajit
dc.contributor.author Vadawale, Santosh V.
dc.contributor.author Del Zanna, Giulio
dc.contributor.author Mithun, N. P. S.
dc.contributor.author Sarkar, Aveek
dc.contributor.author Mason, Helen E.
dc.contributor.author Janardhan, P.
dc.contributor.author Bhardwaj, Anil
dc.coverage.spatial United States of America
dc.date.accessioned 2023-01-20T07:17:56Z
dc.date.available 2023-01-20T07:17:56Z
dc.date.issued 2023-01
dc.identifier.citation Mondal, Biswajit; Vadawale, Santosh V.; Del Zanna, Giulio; Mithun, N. P. S.; Sarkar, Aveek; Mason, Helen E.; Janardhan, P. and Bhardwaj, Anil, "Evolution of elemental abundances in hot active region cores from Chandrayaan-2 XSM observations", arXiv, Cornell University Library, DOI: arXiv:2301.03519, Jan. 2023. en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.03519
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/123456789/8510
dc.description.abstract The First Ionization Potential (FIP) bias, whereby elemental abundances for low FIP elements in different coronal structures vary from their photospheric values and may also vary with time, has been widely studied. In order to study the temporal variation, and to understand the physical mechanisms giving rise to the FIP bias, we have investigated the hot cores of three ARs using disk-integrated soft X-ray spectroscopic observation with the Solar X-ray Monitor (XSM) onboard Chandrayaan-2. Observations for periods when only one AR was present on the solar disk were used so as to ensure that the AR was the principal contributor to the total X-ray intensity. The average values of temperature and EM were ~3 MK and 3.0E46/cm3 respectively. Regardless of the age and activity of the AR, the elemental abundances of the low FIP elements, Al, Mg, and Si were consistently higher than their photospheric values. The average FIP bias for Mg and Si was ~3, whereas the FIP bias for the mid-FIP element, S, was ~1.5. However, the FIP bias for the lowest FIP element, Al, was observed to be higher than 3, which, if real, suggests a dependence of the FIP bias of low FIP elements on their FIP value. Another major result from our analysis is that the FIP bias of these elements is established in within ~10 hours of emergence of the AR and then remains almost constant throughout its lifetime.
dc.description.statementofresponsibility by Biswajit Mondal, Santosh V. Vadawale, Giulio Del Zanna, N. P. S. Mithun, Aveek Sarkar, Helen E. Mason, P. Janardhan and Anil Bhardwaj
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Cornell University Library en_US
dc.subject FIP bias en_US
dc.subject Chandrayaan-2 en_US
dc.subject XSM en_US
dc.subject AR en_US
dc.subject Spectroscopic observation en_US
dc.title Evolution of elemental abundances in hot active region cores from Chandrayaan-2 XSM observations en_US
dc.type Pre-Print Archive en_US
dc.relation.journal arXiv


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