Chromospheric Jet and Growing "Loop" Observed by Hinode: New Evidence of Fan-Spine Magnetic Topology Resulting From Flux Emergence
Wei Liu, Thomas E. Berger, Alan M. Title, Theodore D. Tarbell, and B., C. Low

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed Hinode observations of a chromospheric jet and loop system, providing new evidence of fan-spine magnetic topology resulting from flux emergence and magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere.
Contribution
It offers high-resolution observational evidence linking flux emergence to fan-spine topology formation and jet dynamics, enhancing understanding of magnetic reconnection processes.
Findings
Observation of rotating chromospheric threads at ~50 km/s.
Detection of upward propagating transverse oscillations up to 786 km/s.
Identification of a fan-spine magnetic topology associated with flux emergence.
Abstract
We present observations of a chromospheric jet and growing "loop" system that show new evidence of a fan-spine topology resulting from magnetic flux emergence. This event, occurring in an equatorial coronal hole on 2007 February 9, was observed by the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope in the Ca II H line in unprecedented detail. The predecessor of the jet is a bundle of fine material threads that extend above the chromosphere and appear to rotate about the bundle axis at ~50 km/s (period <200 s). These rotations or transverse oscillations propagate upward at velocities up to 786 km/s. The bundle first slowly and then rapidly swings up, with the transition occurring at the onset of an A4.9 flare. A loop expands simultaneously in these two phases (velocity: 16-135 km/s). Near the peak of the flare, the loop appears to rupture; simultaneous upward ejecta and mass downflows faster than…
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