Bibcode
DOI
Asensio Ramos, A.; Trujillo Bueno, J.; Carlsson, M.; Cernicharo, J.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 588, Issue 1, pp. L61-L64.
Advertised on:
5
2003
Journal
Citations
41
Refereed citations
31
Description
Investigating the reliability of the assumption of instantaneous
chemical equilibrium (ICE) for calculating the CO number density in the
solar atmosphere is of crucial importance for the resolution of the
long-standing controversy over the existence of ``cool clouds'' in the
chromosphere and for determining whether the cool gas owes its existence
to CO radiative cooling or to a hydrodynamical process. Here we report
the first results of such an investigation in which we have carried out
time-dependent gas-phase chemistry calculations in radiation
hydrodynamical simulations of solar chromospheric dynamics. We show that
while the ICE approximation turns out to be suitable for modeling the
observed infrared CO lines at the solar disk center, it may
substantially overestimate the ``heights of formation'' of strong CO
lines synthesized close to the edge of the solar disk, especially
concerning vigorous dynamic cases resulting from relatively strong
photospheric disturbances. This happens because during the cool phases
of the hydrodynamical simulations, the CO number density in the outer
atmospheric regions is smaller than what is stipulated by the ICE
approximation, resulting in decreased CO opacity in the solar
chromosphere. As a result, the cool CO-bearing gas that produces the
observed molecular lines must be located at atmospheric heights not
greater than ~700 km. We conclude that taking into account the
nonequilibrium chemistry improves the agreement with the available
on-disk and off-limb observations but that the hydrodynamical simulation
model has to be even cooler than anticipated by the ICE approximation,
and this has to be the case at the ``new'' (i.e., deeper) formation
regions of the rovibrational CO lines.