119 research outputs found
A Two-sided-Loop X-Ray Solar Coronal Jet and a Sudden Photospheric Magnetic-field Change, Both Driven by a Minifilament Eruption
Most of the commonly discussed solar coronal jets are of the type consisting of a single spire extending approximately vertically from near the solar surface into the corona. Recent research of a substantial number of events shows that eruption of a miniature filament (minifilament) drives at least many such single-spire jets, and concurrently generates a miniflare at the eruption site. A different type of coronal jet, identified in X-ray images during the Yohkoh era, are two-sided-loop jets, which extend from a central excitation location in opposite directions, along two opposite low-lying coronal loops that are more-or-less horizontal to the surface. We observe such a two-sided-loop jet from the edge of active region (AR) 12473, using data from Hinode XRT and EIS, and SDO AIA and HMI. Similar to single-spire jets, this two-sided-loop jet results from eruption of a minifilament, which accelerates to over 140 km/s before abruptly stopping upon striking overlying nearlyhorizontal magnetic field at 30,000 km altitude and producing the two-sided-loop jet via interchange reconnection. Analysis of EIS raster scans show that a hot brightening, consistent with a small flare, develops in the aftermath of the eruption, and that Doppler motions (40 km/s) occur near the jet-formation region. As with many single-spire jets, the trigger of the eruption here is apparently magnetic flux cancelation, which occurs at a rate of 410^18 Mx/hr, comparable to the rate observed in some single-spire AR jets. This example of a two-sided jet, along with numerous examples of single-spire jets, supports that essentially all coronal jets result from eruptions of minifiaments, and frequently the eruption of the minifilment is triggered by magnetic flux cancelation. (Details are in Sterling et al. 2019, ApJ, 871, 220.
Fibrillar Chromospheric Spicule-Like Counterparts to an EUV and Soft X-Ray Blowout Coronal Jet
We observe an erupting jet feature in a solar polar coronal hole, using data from Hinode/SOT, EIS, and XRT, with supplemental data from STEREO/EUVI. From EUV and soft X-ray (SXR) images we identify the erupting feature as a blowout coronal jet: in SXRs it is a jet with bright base, and in EUV it appears as an eruption of relatively cool (approximately 50,000 K) material of horizontal size scale approximately 30" originating from the base of the SXR jet. In SOT Ca II H images the most pronounced analog is a pair of thin (approximately 1") ejections, at the locations of either of the two legs of the erupting EUV jet. These Ca II features eventually rise beyond 45", leaving the SOT field of view, and have an appearance similar to standard spicules except that they are much taller. They have velocities similar to that of "type II" spicules, approximately 100 kilometers per second, and they appear to have spicule-like substructures splitting off from them with horizontal velocity approximately 50 kilometers per second, similar to the velocities of splitting spicules measured by Sterling et al. (2010). Motions of splitting features and of other substructures suggest that the macroscopic EUV jet is spinning or unwinding as it is ejected. This and earlier work suggests that a sub-population of Ca II type II spicules are the Ca II manifestation of portions of larger-scale erupting magnetic jets. A different sub-population of type II spicules could be blowout jets occurring on a much smaller horizontal size scale than the event we observe here
A statistical comparison of EUV brightenings observed by SO/EUI with simulated brightenings in nonpotential simulations
Open access funding provided by Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich. L.H. and K.B. are grateful to the SNF for the funding of the project number 200021_188390. D.H.M. would like to thank the STFC for support via consolidated grant ST/W001195/1. K.A.M. would like to thank the STFC for support via consortium grant ST/W001098/1.The High Resolution Imager (HRIEUV) telescope of the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument onboard Solar Orbiter has observed EUV brightenings, so-called campfires, as fine-scale structures at coronal temperatures. The goal of this paper is to compare the basic geometrical (size, orientation) and physical (intensity, lifetime) properties of the EUV brightenings with regions of energy dissipation in a nonpotential coronal magnetic-field simulation. In the simulation, HMI line-of-sight magnetograms are used as input to drive the evolution of solar coronal magnetic fields and energy dissipation. We applied an automatic EUV-brightening detection method to EUV images obtained on 30 May 2020 by the HRIEUV telescope. We applied the same detection method to the simulated energy dissipation maps from the nonpotential simulation to detect simulated brightenings. We detected EUV brightenings with a density of 1.41×10−3 brightenings/Mm2 in the EUI observations and simulated brightenings between 2.76×10−2 – 4.14×10−2 brightenings/Mm2 in the simulation, for the same time range. Although significantly more brightenings were produced in the simulations, the results show similar distributions of the key geometrical and physical properties of the observed and simulated brightenings. We conclude that the nonpotential simulation can successfully reproduce statistically the characteristic properties of the EUV brightenings (typically with more than 85% similarity); only the duration of the events is significantly different between observations and simulation. Further investigations based on high-cadence and high-resolution magnetograms from Solar Orbiter are under consideration to improve the agreement between observation and simulation.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Plasma evolution within an erupting coronal cavity
Coronal cavities have previously been observed associated with long-lived
quiescent filaments and are thought to correspond to the associated magnetic
flux rope. Although the standard flare model predicts a coronal cavity
corresponding to the erupting flux rope, these have only been observed using
broadband imaging data, restricting analysis to the plane-of-sky. We present a
unique set of spectroscopic observations of an active region filament seen
erupting at the solar limb in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV). The cavity erupted
and expanded rapidly, with the change in rise phase contemporaneous with an
increase in non-thermal electron energy flux of the associated flare. Hot and
cool filamentary material was observed to rise with the erupting flux rope,
disappearing suddenly as the cavity appeared. Although strongly blue-shifted
plasma continued to be observed flowing from the apex of the erupting flux
rope, this outflow soon ceased. These results indicate that the sudden
injection of energy from the flare beneath forced the rapid eruption and
expansion of the flux rope, driving strong plasma flows which resulted in the
eruption of an under-dense filamentary flux rope.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
The characteristics of solar x-class flares and CMEs: a paradigm for stellar superflares and eruptions?
This paper explores the characteristics of 42 solar X-class flares that were observed between February 2011 and November 2014, with data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and other sources. This flare list includes nine X-class flares that had no associated CMEs. In particular our aim was to determine whether a clear signature could be identified to differentiate powerful flares that have coronal mass ejections (CMEs) from those that do not. Part of the motivation for this study is the characterization of the solar paradigm for flare/CME occurrence as a possible guide to the stellar observations; hence we emphasize spectroscopic signatures. To do this we ask the following questions: Do all eruptive flares have long durations? Do CME-related flares stand out in terms of active-region size vs. flare duration? Do flare magnitudes correlate with sunspot areas, and, if so, are eruptive events distinguished? Is the occurrence of CMEs related to the fraction of the active-region area involved? Do X-class flares with no eruptions have weaker non-thermal signatures? Is the temperature dependence of evaporation different in eruptive and non-eruptive flares? Is EUV dimming only seen in eruptive flares? We find only one feature consistently associated with CME-related flares specifically: coronal dimming in lines characteristic of the quiet-Sun corona, i.e. 1 – 2 MK. We do not find a correlation between flare magnitude and sunspot areas. Although challenging, it will be of importance to model dimming for stellar cases and make suitable future plans for observations in the appropriate wavelength range in order to identify stellar CMEs consistently
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Active region modulation of coronal hole solar wind
Active regions (ARs) are a candidate source of the slow solar wind (SW), the origins of which are a topic of ongoing research. We present a case study that examines the processes by which SW is modulated in the presence of an AR in the vicinity of the SW source. We compare properties of SW associated with a coronal hole (CH)–quiet Sun boundary to SW associated with the same CH but one Carrington rotation later, when this region bordered the newly emerged NOAA AR 12532. Differences found in a range of in situ parameters are compared between these rotations in the context of source region mapping and remote sensing observations. Marked changes exist in the structure and composition of the SW, which we attribute to the influence of the AR on SW production from the CH boundary. These unique observations suggest that the features that emerge in the AR-associated wind are consistent with an increased occurrence of interchange reconnection during SW production, compared with the initial quiet Sun case
LEMUR: Large European Module for solar Ultraviolet Research. European contribution to JAXA's Solar-C mission
Understanding the solar outer atmosphere requires concerted, simultaneous
solar observations from the visible to the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) and soft
X-rays, at high spatial resolution (between 0.1" and 0.3"), at high temporal
resolution (on the order of 10 s, i.e., the time scale of chromospheric
dynamics), with a wide temperature coverage (0.01 MK to 20 MK, from the
chromosphere to the flaring corona), and the capability of measuring magnetic
fields through spectropolarimetry at visible and near-infrared wavelengths.
Simultaneous spectroscopic measurements sampling the entire temperature range
are particularly important.
These requirements are fulfilled by the Japanese Solar-C mission (Plan B),
composed of a spacecraft in a geosynchronous orbit with a payload providing a
significant improvement of imaging and spectropolarimetric capabilities in the
UV, visible, and near-infrared with respect to what is available today and
foreseen in the near future.
The Large European Module for solar Ultraviolet Research (LEMUR), described
in this paper, is a large VUV telescope feeding a scientific payload of
high-resolution imaging spectrographs and cameras. LEMUR consists of two major
components: a VUV solar telescope with a 30 cm diameter mirror and a focal
length of 3.6 m, and a focal-plane package composed of VUV spectrometers
covering six carefully chosen wavelength ranges between 17 and 127 nm. The
LEMUR slit covers 280" on the Sun with 0.14" per pixel sampling. In addition,
LEMUR is capable of measuring mass flows velocities (line shifts) down to 2
km/s or better.
LEMUR has been proposed to ESA as the European contribution to the Solar C
mission.Comment: 35 pages, 14 figures. To appear on Experimental Astronom
Signatures of dynamic fibrils at the coronal base: Observations from Solar Orbiter/EUI
The solar chromosphere hosts a wide variety of transients, including dynamic
fibrils (DFs) that are characterised as elongated, jet-like features seen in
active regions, often through H diagnostics. So far, these features
have been difficult to identify in coronal images primarily due to their small
size and the lower spatial resolution of the current EUV imagers. Here we
present the first unambiguous signatures of DFs in coronal EUV data using
high-resolution images from the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) on board Solar
Orbiter. Using the data acquired with the 174~{\AA} High Resolution Imager
(HRI) of EUI, we find many bright dot-like features (of size 0.3-0.5
Mm) that move up and down (often repeatedly) in the core of an active region.
In a space-time map, these features produce parabolic tracks akin to the
chromospheric observations of DFs. Properties such as their speeds (14
km~s), lifetime (332~s), deceleration (82 m~s) and lengths
(1293~km) are also reminiscent of the chromospheric DFs. The EUI data strongly
suggest that these EUV bright dots are basically the hot tips (of the cooler
chromospheric DFs) that could not be identified unambiguously before because of
a lack of spatial resolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters. Event movie can be
downloaded from
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1o_4jHA5JbyQtrpUBtB3ItE_s3HjF6ncc/view?usp=sharin
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