Probing the Role of Magnetic-Field Variations in NOAA AR 8038 in Producing Solar Flare and CME on 12 May 1997
Rajmal Jain, Arun K. Awasthi, Babita Chandel, Lokesh Bharti, Y., Hanaoka, A. L. Kiplinger

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic field variations in NOAA AR 8038 and their role in triggering a solar flare and CME on 12 May 1997, highlighting magnetic reconnection and flux emergence as key processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis linking magnetic field dynamics to the initiation of solar eruptions, emphasizing the role of inner tether-cutting reconnection.
Findings
Magnetic flux emergence and cancellation occurred prior to eruption.
EUV brightenings indicated tether-cutting reconnection.
CME acceleration correlated with magnetic reconnection electric field.
Abstract
We carried out a multi-wavelength study of a CME and a medium-size 1B/C1.3 flare occurring on 12 May 1997. We present the investigation of magnetic-field variations in the NOAA Active Region 8038 which was observed on the Sun during 7--16 May 1997. Analyses of H{\alpha} filtergrams and MDI/SOHO magnetograms revealed continual but discrete surge activity, and emergence and cancellation of flux in this active region. The movie of these magnetograms revealed two important results that the major opposite polarities of pre-existing region as well as in the emerging flux region (EFR) were approaching towards each other and moving magnetic features (MMF) were ejecting out from the major north polarity at a quasi-periodicity of about ten hrs during 10--13 May 1997. These activities were probably caused by the magnetic reconnection in the lower atmosphere driven by photospheric convergence…
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