Large Amplitude Oscillations in Prominences
D. Tripathi, H. Isobe, R. Jain

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in understanding large amplitude oscillations in solar prominences, highlighting their observational properties, trigger mechanisms, and potential for seismology-based magnetic field diagnostics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of large amplitude prominence oscillations, their triggers, and their role in diagnosing prominence magnetic fields and stability.
Findings
Large amplitude oscillations are triggered by flares, jets, or remote disturbances.
Oscillations have periods from tens of minutes to hours.
Seismology techniques yield magnetic field estimates consistent with direct measurements.
Abstract
Since the first reports of oscillations in prominences in 1930s there have been major theoretical and observational advances to understand the nature of these oscillatory phenomena leading to a whole new field of so called "prominence seismology". There are two types of oscillatory phenomena observed in prominences; "small amplitude oscillations" (~2-3 km s) which are quite common and "large amplitude oscillations" (20 km s) for which observations are scarce. Large amplitude oscillations have been found as "winking filament" in H as well as motion in the sky plane in H, EUV, micro-wave and He 10830 observations. Historically, it was suggested that the large amplitude oscillations in prominences were triggered by disturbances such as fast-mode MHD waves (Moreton wave) produced by remote flares. Recent observations show, in addition, that near-by flares or…
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