Accumulation of electric currents driving jetting events in the solar atmosphere
Abstract
The solar atmosphere is populated with a wide variety of structures and phenomena at different spatial and temporal scales. Explosive phenomena are of particular interest due to their contribution to the atmosphere's energy budget and their implications, e.g. coronal heating. Recent instrumental developments have provided important observations and therefore new insights for tracking the dynamic evolution of the solar atmosphere. Jets of plasma are frequently observed in the solar corona and are thought to be a consequence of magnetic reconnection, however, the physics involved is not fully understood. Unprecedented observations (EUV and vector magnetic fields) are used to study solar jetting events, from which we derive the magnetic flux evolution, the photospheric velocity field, and the vertical electric current evolution. The evolution of magnetic parasitic polarities displaying diverging flows are detected to trigger recurrent jets in a solar regionon 17 September 2010. The interaction drive the build up of electric currents. Observed diverging flows are proposed to build continuously such currents. Magnetic reconnection is proposed to occur periodically, in the current layer created between the emerging bipole and the large scale active region field. SDO/AIA EUV composite images.
Upper: SDO/AIA 171 Å image overlaid by the line-of-sight magnetic field observed at the same time as that of the 171 Å image. Lower: Map of photospheric transverse velocities derived from LCT analysis with the HMI magnetograms.- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFMSH13A1995V
- Keywords:
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- 7526 SOLAR PHYSICS;
- ASTROPHYSICS;
- AND ASTRONOMY Magnetic reconnection;
- 7524 SOLAR PHYSICS;
- ASTROPHYSICS;
- AND ASTRONOMY Magnetic fields;
- 7507 SOLAR PHYSICS;
- ASTROPHYSICS;
- AND ASTRONOMY Chromosphere;
- 7509 SOLAR PHYSICS;
- ASTROPHYSICS;
- AND ASTRONOMY Corona