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1.
Using data from the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE), Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI), and Hida Observatory (HO), we present a detailed study of an EUV jet and the associated Hα filament eruption in
a major flare in the active region NOAA 10044 on 29 July 2002. In the Hα line wings, a small filament was found to erupt out
from the magnetic neutral line of the active region during the flare. Two bright EUV loops were observed rising and expanding
with the filament eruption, and both hot and cool EUV plasma ejections were observed to form the EUV jet. The two thermal
components spatially separated from each other and lasted for about 25 minutes. In the white-light corona data, a narrow coronal
mass ejection (CME) was found to respond to this EUV jet. We cannot find obvious emerging flux in the photosphere accounting
for the filament eruption and the EUV jet. However, significant sunspot decay and magnetic-flux cancelation owing to collision
of opposite flux before the events were noticed. Based on the hard X-ray data from RHESSI, which showed evidence of magnetic
reconnection along the main magnetic neutral line, we think that all of the observed dynamical phenomena, including the EUV
jet, filament eruption, flare, and CME, should have a close relation to the flux cancelation in the low atmosphere. 相似文献
2.
We present and interpret observations of the preflare phase of the eruptive flare of 15 November, 1991 in NOAA AR 6919. New
flux emerged in this region, indicated by arch filaments in Hα and increasing vertical flux in vector magnetograms. With increasing
frequency before the eruption, transient dark Hα fibrils were observed that crossed Hα bright plage and the magnetic inversion
line to extend from the region of flux emergence to the filament, whose eruption was associated with the flare. These crossing
fibrils were dynamic, and were often associated with sites of propagating torsional motion. These sites propagated from the
region of flux emergence into the filament flux system. We interpret these morphological and dynamic features in terms of
relaxation after magnetic reconnection episodes which create longer field lines within the filament flux system, as envisioned
in the tether cutting model, and transfer twist to it, as well.
Supplementary material to this paper is available in electronic form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1005086108043 相似文献
3.
We study active region NOAA 9684 (N06L285) which produced an X1.0/3B flare on November 4, 2001 associated with a fast CME
(1810 km s−1) and the largest proton event (31 700 pfu) in cycle 23. SOHO/MDI continuum image data show that a large leading sunspot rotated
counter-clockwise around its umbral center for at least 4 days prior to the flare. Moreover, it is found from SOHO/MDI 96
m line-of-sight magnetograms that the systematic tilt angle of the bipolar active region, a proxy for writhe of magnetic fluxtubes,
changed from a positive value to a negative one. This signifies a counter-clockwise rotation of the spot-group as a whole.
Using vector magnetograms from Huairou Solar Observing Station (HSOS), we find that the twist of the active region magnetic
fields is dominantly left handed (αbest = −0.03), and that the vertical current and current helicity are predominantly negative, and mostly distributed within the
positive rotating sunspot. The active region exhibits a narrow inverse S-shaped Hα filament and soft X-ray sigmoid distributed along the magnetic neutral line. The portion of the filament which is most closely
associated with the rotating sunspot disappeared on November 4, and the corresponding portion of the sigmoid was observed
to erupt, producing the flare and initiating the fast CME and proton event. These results imply that the sunspot rotation
is a primary driver of helicity production and injection into the corona. We suggest that the observed active region dynamics
and subsequent filament and sigmoid eruption are driven by a kink instability which occurred due to a large amount of the
helicity injection. 相似文献
4.
We present a multi-wavelength analysis of an eruption event that occurred in active region NOAA 11093 on 7 August 2010, using
data obtained from SDO, STEREO, RHESSI, and the GONG Hα network telescope. From these observations, we inferred that an upward
slow rising motion of an inverse S-shaped filament lying along the polarity inversion line resulted in a CME subsequent to
a two-ribbon flare. Interaction of overlying field lines across the filament with the side-lobe field lines, associated EUV
brightening, and flux emergence/cancelation around the filament were the observational signatures of the processes leading
to its destabilization and the onset of eruption. Moreover, the time profile of the rising motion of the filament/flux rope
corresponded well with flare characteristics, viz., the reconnection rate and hard X-ray emission profiles. The flux rope was accelerated to the maximum velocity as a CME
at the peak phase of the flare, followed by deceleration to an average velocity of 590 km s−1. We suggest that the observed emergence/cancelation of magnetic fluxes near the filament caused it to rise, resulting in
the tethers to cut and reconnection to take place beneath the filament; in agreement with the tether-cutting model. The corresponding
increase/decrease in positive/negative photospheric fluxes found in the post-peak phase of the eruption provides unambiguous
evidence of reconnection as a consequence of tether cutting. 相似文献
5.
Ayumi Asai Takaaki Yokoyama Masumi Shimojo Satoshi Masuda Kazunari Shibata 《Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy》2006,27(2-3):167-173
We report a detailed examination about the relationship between the evolution of the Hα flare ribbons and the released magnetic
energy during the April 10 2001 flare. In the Hα images, several bright kernels are observed in the flare ribbons. We identified
the conjugated foot-points, by analyzing the lightcurves at each Hα kernels, and showed their connectivities during the flare.
Then, based on the magnetic reconnection model, we calculated quantitatively the released energy by using the photospheric
magnetic field strengths and separation speeds of the Hα flare ribbons. Finally, we examined the downward motions which are
observed at the Hα kernels. We found that the stronger the red-asymmetry tends to be associated with the brighter the Hα kernel. 相似文献
6.
Ramesh Chandra Rajmal Jain Wahab Uddin Keiji Yoshimura Takeo Kosugi Taro Sakao Anita Joshi M. R. Deshpande 《Solar physics》2006,239(1-2):239-256
We present Hα observations from ARIES (Nainital) of a compact and impulsive solar flare that occurred on March 10, 2001 and
which was associated with a CME. We have also analyzed HXT, SXT/Yohkoh observations as well as radio observations from the Nobeyama Radio Observatory to derive the energetics and dynamics of this
impulsive flare. We coalign the Hα, SXR, HXR, MW, and magnetogram images within the instrumental spatial-resolution limit.
We detect a single HXR source in this flare, which is found spatially associated with one of the Hα bright kernels. The unusual
feature of HXR and Hα sources, observed for the first time, is the rotation during the impulsive phase in a clockwise direction.
We propose that the rotation may be due to asymmetric progress of the magnetic reconnection site or may be due to the change
of the peak point of the electric field. In MW emission we found two sources. The main source is at the main flare site and
another is in the southwest direction. It appears that the remote source is formed by the impact of accelerated energetic
electrons from the main flare site. From the spatial correlation of multiwavelength images of the different sources, we conclude
that this flare has a three-legged structure. 相似文献
7.
We report on the occurrence of Hα dimming associated with a sigmoid eruption in a quiet-sun region on 14 August 2001. The
coronal sigmoid in soft X-ray images from the Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope was located over an Hα filament channel. Its eruption was accompanied by a flare of GOES X-ray class
C2.3 and possibly associated with a halo coronal mass ejection (CME) observed with the Large Angle and Spectroscopic Coronagraphs (LASCO) on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). During the eruption, coronal bipolar double dimming took place at the regions with opposite magnetic polarities around
the two sigmoid ends, but the underlying chromospheric channel did not show observable changes corresponding to the coronal
eruption. Different from the erupting coronal sigmoid itself, however, the coronal dimming had a detectable chromosphere counterpart,
i.e., Hα dimming. By regarding the sigmoid as a coronal sign for a flux rope, these observations are explained in the framework
of the flux rope model of CMEs. The flux rope is possibly deeply rooted in the chromosphere, and the coronal and Hα dimming
regions mark its evacuated feet, through which the material is possibly fed to the halo CME. 相似文献
8.
We have taken the case of a circular Hα filament observed on May 9,1979 erupting into a double-ribbon flare associated with
a non-spot region. The plage motions are responsible for the filament reorientation and, here as a special case, wherein the
filament attains a clear circular shape before the onset of a flare. We conclude that the change in the orientation of the
Hα filament marks the instability giving rise to the flare. 相似文献
9.
Observations and analyses of two similar eruptive prominences on the north-east limb observed on 1980 April 27 at 0231 and
0517 UT, which are associated with the Boulder active region No. 2416 are presented. Both the eruptive prominences gave rise
to white-light coronal transients as observed by C/P experiment of High Altitude Observatory on the Solar Maximum Mission.
Type II and moving type IV radio bursts are reported in association with the first Hα eruptive prominence at 0231 UT.
Both the Hα eruptive prominences showed pulse activity with a quasi-periodicity of about 2–4 min. We estimate a magnetic field
in the eruptive prominence of about 100 G and a build-up rate ∼ 1026 ergs-1. The high build-up rate indicates that the shearing of the photospheric magnetic field, which fed the energy into the filament,
was rapid. It is proposed that fast-moving Hα features must have initiated the observed coronal transients. From Hα, type
II and coronal-transient observations, we estimate a magnetic field of 2.8 G at 1.9R⊙ from the disc centre, which agrees well with the earlier results. 相似文献
10.
Magnetic field structures of Hα flares associated with meter-wave type III bursts during periods of low solar activity in
1975 – 1977 and 1985 – 1987 were investigated. In a statistical analysis it was confirmed that the association rate depends
less on flare importance than on brightness. For subflares (95% of the sample), the location of the Hα flare in the bipolar
pattern turned out to be crucial for the association rate. It is almost one order of magnitude larger for flares occurring
at the border of the active regions, compared to flares located inside the general bipolar pattern. For selected typical examples
of flares, extrapolations of the measured magnetic fields were performed. By matching Hα filtergrams and calculated 3-D structures
it was found that the positions at the border where the flares associated with type III bursts occurred were close to open
field lines extending into the corona. In most investigated cases intrusions of parasitic polarity were found in the vicinity
of the flare locations. The extrapolations showed that subflares located inside the bipolar pattern but have not been associated
with type III bursts were covered by dense arcades of magnetic loops. 相似文献
11.
Louise K. Harra 《中国天文和天体物理学报》2006,6(2):247-259
We revisit the Bastille Day flare/CME Event of 2000 July 14, and demonstrate that this flare/CME event is not related to only one single active region (AR). Activation and eruption of a huge transequatorial filament are seen to precede the simultaneous filament eruption and flare in the source active region, NOAA AR 9077, and the full halo-CME in the high corona. Evidence of reconfiguration of large-scale magnetic structures related to the event is illustrated by SOHO EIT and Yohkoh SXT observations, as well as, the reconstructed 3D magnetic lines of force based on the force-free assumption. We suggest that the AR filament in AR9077 was connected to the transequatorial filament. The large-scale magnetic composition related to the transequatorial filament and its sheared magnetic arcade appears to be an essential part of the CME parent magnetic structure. Estimations show that the filament-arcade system has enough magnetic helicity to account for the helicity carried by the related CMEs. In addition, rather global magnetic connectivity, covering almost all the visible range in longitude and a huge span in latitude on the Sun, is implied by the Nancay Radioheliograph (NRH) observations. The analysis of the Bastille Day event suggests that although the triggering of a global CME might take place in an AR, a much larger scale magnetic composition seems to be the source of the ejected magnetic flux, helicity and plasma. The Bastille Day event is the first described example in the literature, in which a transequatorial filament activity appears to play a key role in a global CME. Many tens of halo-CME are found to be associated with transequatorial filaments and their magnetic environment. 相似文献
12.
G. Cristiani G. Martinez C. H. Mandrini C. G. Giménez De Castro C. W. Da Silva M. G. Rovira P. Kaufmann 《Solar physics》2007,240(2):271-281
Using magnetograms, EUV and Hα images, Owens Valley Solar Array microwave observations, and 212-GHz flux density derived from
the Solar Submillimeter Telescope data, we determine the spatial characteristics of the 1B/M6.9 flare that occurred on November
28, 2001, starting at 16:26 UT in active region (AR) NOAA 9715. This flare is associated with a chromospheric mass ejection
or surge observed at 16:42 UT in the Hα images. We compute the coronal magnetic field under the linear force-free field assumption,
constrained by the photospheric data of the Michelson Doppler Imager and loops observed by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging
Telescope. The analysis of the magnetic field connectivity allows us to conclude that magnetic field reconnection between
two different coronal/chromospheric sets of arches was at the origin of the flare and surge, respectively. The optically thick
microwave spectrum at peak time shows a shape compatible with the emission from two different sites. Fitting gyrosynchrotron
emission to the observed spectrum, we derive parameters for each source.
Electronic Supplementary Material The online version of this article () contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献
13.
Innes D.E. Inhester B. Srivastava N. Brekke P. Harrison R.A. Matthews S.A. Noëns J.C. Schmieder B. Thompson B.J. 《Solar physics》1999,186(1-2):337-361
The structure and dynamics of the initial phases of a coronal mass ejection (CME) seen in soft X-ray, extreme ultraviolet and optical emission are described. The event occurred on the SW limb of the Sun in active region AR 8026 on 9 April 1997. Just prior to the CME there was a class C1.5 flare. Images taken with the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) reveal the emergence of a candle-flame shaped extreme ultraviolet (EUV) cavity at the time of the flare. Yohkoh images, taken about 15 min later, show that this cavity is filled with hot X-ray emitting gas. It is most likely that this is the site of the flare. Almost simultaneous to the flare, an H surge or small filament eruption occurs about 50 arc sec northwards along the limb from the EUV cavity. At both the site of the core of the hot, EUV cavity and the filament ejection are X-ray jets. These jets seem to be connected by hot loops near their bases. Both jets disappear within a few minutes of one another.Clear evidence of the CME first appeared in the Large Angle Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) and EIT images 40 min after the flare and onset of the filament ejection. It seems to come from a region between the two X-ray jets. This leads to the speculation that magnetic field reconnection near one footpoint of a loop system triggers reconnection near its other footpoint. The loop system is destabilized and ultimately gives rise to the CME. This possibility is supported by magnetic field and H images taken when the active region was at disk center which show that the active region had a double bipole structure with dark H filaments between the bipoles. 相似文献
14.
C. H. Mandrini P. Demoulin B. Schmieder E. E. Deluca E. Pariat W. Uddin 《Solar physics》2006,238(2):293-312
A major two-ribbon X17 flare occurred on 28 October 2003, starting at 11:01 UT in active region NOAA 10486. This flare was
accompanied by the eruption of a filament and by one of the fastest halo coronal mass ejections registered during the October–November
2003 strong activity period. We focus on the analysis of magnetic field (SOHO/MDI), chromospheric (NainiTal observatory and
TRACE), and coronal (TRACE) data obtained before and during the 28 October event. By combining our data analysis with a model
of the coronal magnetic field, we concentrate on the study of two events starting before the main flare. One of these events,
evident in TRACE images around one hour prior to the main flare, involves a localized magnetic reconnection process associated
with the presence of a coronal magnetic null point. This event extends as long as the major flare and we conclude that it
is independent from it. A second event, visible in Hα and TRACE images, simultaneous with the previous one, involves a large-scale
quadrupolar reconnection process that contributes to decrease the magnetic field tension in the overlaying field configuration;
this allows the filament to erupt in a way similar to that proposed by the breakout model, but with magnetic reconnection
occurring at Quasi-Separatrix Layers (QSLs) rather than at a magnetic null point.
Electronic supplementary material Electronic supplementary material is available for this article at and accessible for authorised users. 相似文献
15.
We use Yohkoh soft X-ray telescope data and H full-disk observations to study the evolution of chromospheric filaments and coronal sigmoids in 6 active regions in association with coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In two cases, CMEs are directly observed by the SOHO/LASCO C2 coronagraph. In four cases, other observations (magnetic clouds, geomagnetic storms, sigmoid-arcade evolution) are used as CME indicators. Prior to eruption, each active region shows a bright coronal sigmoidal loop and underlying H filament. The sigmoid activates, erupts and gets replaced by a cusp, or an arcade. In contrast, the H filament shows no significant changes in association with sigmoid eruption and CME. We explain these observations in a framework of the classical two-ribbon flare model. 相似文献
16.
A solar radio type II burst (which was seen as two patches of emission, one during 07:00–07:13 UT and other one during 07:20–07:35 UT)
was observed on 22 March 1998 using the Madurai radio spectrograph. A broad range of data (from Culgoora and Hiraiso spectrographs,
white-light data from SOHO/LASCO and X-ray data from Yohkoh and GOES satellites) was also studied for this event, which was analyzed in comparison with these supplementary data. In
addition, the conditions associated with this shock were analyzed quantitatively. From the above investigations, the following
conclusions have been made. The temporal relationship between H-alpha flare and burst has shown that the active region AR 8185
is the source of this type II burst. A bright front feature observed with LASCO is also associated with this type II burst
and active region AR 8185. The time profile of the shock derived from the first patch of this type II burst coincides with
the flare starting time. Also, within error limits, the start time of the CME is same as the flare. Hence, it is not possible
to decide whether the type II originated in the flare or was driven by CME. In addition, the investigations of the second
patch alone has provided the following results. The inferred shock speed for the second patch of emission is lower than the
first and closer to the CME speed. The emission occurred below 50 MHz. These conditions imply that this patch may be a separate
burst which might have been produced by the CME alone. 相似文献
17.
Magnetic reconnection in the temperature minimum region of the solar photosphere can account for the canceling magnetic features
on the Sun. Litvinenko (1999a) showed that a reconnection model explains the quiet-Sun features with the magnetic flux cancelation
rate of order 1017 Mx hr−1. In this paper the model is applied to cancelation in solar active regions, which is characterized by a much larger rate
of cancelation ∖ ge1019 Mx hr−1. In particular, the evolution of a photospheric canceling feature observed in an active region on July 2, 1994 is studied.
The theoretical predictions are demonstrated to be in reasonable agreement with the measured speed of approaching magnetic
fragments, the magnetic field in the fragments, and the flux cancelation rate, deduced from the combined Big Bear Hα time-lapse
images and videomagnetograms calibrated against the daily NSO/Kitt Peak magnetogram. Of particular interest is the prediction
that photospheric reconnection should lead to a significant upward mass flux and the formation of a solar filament. Hα observations
indeed showed a filament that had one of its ends spatially superposed with the canceling feature.
Supplementary material to this paper is available in electronic form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1005284116353 相似文献
18.
V. V. Grechnev A. M. Uralov V. A. Slemzin I. M. Chertok B. P. Filippov G. V. Rudenko M. Temmer 《Solar physics》2014,289(1):289-318
This is the first of four companion papers, which comprehensively analyze a complex eruptive event of 18 November 2003 in active region (AR) 10501 and the causes of the largest Solar Cycle 23 geomagnetic storm on 20 November 2003. Analysis of a complete data set, not considered before, reveals a chain of eruptions to which hard X-ray and microwave bursts responded. A filament in AR 10501 was not a passive part of a larger flux rope, as usually considered. The filament erupted and gave origin to a coronal mass ejection (CME). The chain of events was as follows: i) a presumable eruption at 07:29 UT accompanied by a not reported M1.2 class flare probably associated with the onset of a first southeastern CME (CME1), which most likely is not responsible for the superstorm; ii) a confined eruption (without a CME) at 07:41 UT (M3.2 flare) that destabilized the large filament; iii) the filament acceleration around 07:56 UT; iv) the bifurcation of the eruptive filament that transformed into a large “cloud”; v) an M3.9 flare in AR 10501 associated to this transformation. The transformation of the filament could be due to the interaction of the eruptive filament with the magnetic field in the neighborhood of a null point, located at a height of about 100 Mm above the complex formed by ARs 10501, 10503, and their environment. The CORONAS-F/SPIRIT telescope observed the cloud in 304 Å as a large Y-shaped darkening, which moved from the bifurcation region across the solar disk to the limb. The masses and kinematics of the cloud and the filament were similar. Remnants of the filament were not clearly observed in the second southwestern CME (CME2), previously regarded as a source of the 20 November geomagnetic storm. These facts do not support a simple scenario, in which the interplanetary magnetic cloud is considered as a flux rope formed from a structure initially associated with the pre-eruption filament in AR 10501. Observations suggest a possible additional eruption above the bifurcation region close to solar disk center between 08:07 and 08:17 UT, which could be the source of the 20 November superstorm. 相似文献
19.
1 INTRODUCTIONCoronal majss ejections (CMEs) are often seen as spectacular eruptions of matter fromthe Sun which propagate outward through the heliosphere and often interact with the Earth'smagnetosphere (Hundhausen, 1997; Gosling, 1997; and references herein). It is well known thatthese interactions can have substalltial consequences on the geomagnetic environment of theEarth, sometimes resulting in damage to satellites (e.g., McAllister et al., 1996; Berdichevskyet al., 1998). CMEs… 相似文献
20.
C. P. Goff L. van Driel-Gesztelyi P. Démoulin J. L. Culhane S. A. Matthews L. K. Harra C. H. Mandrini K. L. Klein H. Kurokawa 《Solar physics》2007,240(2):283-299
A series of flares (GOES class M, M and C) and a CME were observed in close succession on 20 January 2004 in NOAA 10540. Radio
observations, which took the form of types II, III and N bursts, were associated with these events. We use the combined observations
from TRACE, EIT, Hα images from Kwasan, MDI magnetograms and GOES to understand the complex development of this event. Contrary
to a standard interpretation, we conclude that the first two impulsive flares are part of the CME launch process while the
following long-duration event flare represents simply the recovery phase. Observations show that the flare ribbons not only
separate but also shift along the magnetic inversion line so that magnetic reconnection progresses stepwise to neighboring
flux tubes. We conclude that “tether cutting” reconnection in the sheared arcade progressively transforms it to a twisted
flux tube, which becomes unstable, leading to a CME. We interpret the third flare, a long-duration event, as a combination
of the classical two-ribbon flare with the relaxation process following forced reconnection between the expanding CME structure
and neighboring magnetic fields.
Electronic Supplementary Material The online version of this article () contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献