Ejection of cool plasma into the hot corona
P. Zacharias, H. Peter, S. Bingert

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to analyze the formation and ejection of cool plasma in the solar corona, revealing a hydrodynamic explosion driven by magnetic heating and field line braiding.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical investigation of plasma ejection processes in the solar corona, highlighting the magnetic and hydrodynamic interplay involved.
Findings
Plasma ejection speeds are comparable to the sound speed.
Ejection is primarily a hydrodynamic process driven by magnetic heating.
Magnetic field braiding causes strong currents leading to plasma ejection.
Abstract
We investigate the processes that lead to the formation, ejection and fall of a confined plasma ejection that was observed in a numerical experiment of the solar corona. By quantifying physical parameters such as mass, velocity, and orientation of the plasma ejection relative to the magnetic field, we provide a description of the nature of this particular phenomenon. The time-dependent three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (3D MHD) equations are solved in a box extending from the chromosphere to the lower corona. The plasma is heated by currents that are induced through field line braiding as a consequence of photospheric motions. Spectra of optically thin emission lines in the extreme ultraviolet range are synthesized, and magnetic field lines are traced over time. Following strong heating just above the chromosphere, the pressure rapidly increases, leading to a hydrodynamic explosion…
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