Predictions of energy and helicity in four major eruptive solar flares
Maria D. Kazachenko, Richard C. Canfield, Dana W. Longcope, Jiong Qiu

TL;DR
This study models four major eruptive solar flares to predict magnetic and energetic properties, comparing them with observations, and concludes that magnetic clouds are formed by low-corona reconnection during eruptions.
Contribution
It applies the 3D Minimum Current Corona model to relate solar flare properties to magnetic cloud observations, providing new insights into the formation of magnetic clouds.
Findings
Model reconnection fluxes are equal or lower than observed ribbon-based fluxes.
Predicted flux rope helicities match those of magnetic clouds.
Energy stored by shearing and rotation explains flare and cloud properties.
Abstract
n order to better understand the solar genesis of interplanetary magnetic clouds (MCs) we model the magnetic and topological properties of four large eruptive solar flares and relate them to observations. We use the three-dimensional Minimum Current Corona model \cite{Longcope1996d} and observations of pre-flare photospheric magnetic field and flare ribbons to derive values of reconnected magnetic flux, flare energy, flux rope helicity and orientation of the flux rope poloidal field. We compare model predictions of those quantities to flare and MC observations and within the estimated uncertainties of the methods used find the following. The predicted model reconnection fluxes are equal to or lower than the reconnection fluxes inferred from the observed ribbon motions. Both observed and model reconnection fluxes match the MC poloidal fluxes. The predicted flux rope helicities match the…
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