Low polarized emission from the core of coronal mass ejections
M. Mierla, I. Chifu, B. Inhester, L. Rodriguez, A. Zhukov

TL;DR
This study reveals that the bright core of a CME is predominantly H-alpha emission with low polarization, indicating it is not mainly Thomson-scattered light as previously assumed.
Contribution
First to demonstrate that CME core emission is mainly H-alpha radiation with low polarization, using stereoscopic analysis to localize the emission source.
Findings
CME core material is located near the center of the cloud.
Over 85% of the core emission is H-alpha radiation.
Plasma density in the core is significantly higher than surrounding CME environment.
Abstract
In white-light coronagraph images, cool prominence material is sometimes observed as bright patches in the core of coronal mass ejections (CMEs). If, as generally assumed, this emission is caused by Thomson-scattered light from the solar surface, it should be strongly polarised tangentially to the solar limb. However, the observations of a CME made with the SECCHI/STEREO coronagraphs on 31 August 2007 show that the emission from these bright core patches is exceptionally low polarised. We used the polarisation ratio method of Moran and Davila (2004) to localise the barycentre of the CME cloud. By analysing the data from both STEREO spacecraft we could resolve the plane-of-the-sky ambiguity this method usually suffers from. Stereoscopic triangulation was used to independently localise the low-polarisation patch relative to the cloud. We demonstrated for the first time that the bright…
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