Spectroscopic evidence for helicity in explosive events
Werner Curdt, Hui Tian

TL;DR
This paper presents spectroscopic evidence suggesting that some solar explosive events are caused by small, spinning plasma structures like spicules, challenging the traditional jet interpretation and proposing a unified helicity-driven model.
Contribution
It introduces the idea that explosive events and spicules are manifestations of the same helicity-driven phenomena, supported by spectroscopic and observational evidence.
Findings
Spectroscopic signatures consistent with spinning plasma structures.
Evidence of helicity in macrospicules and spicules.
Proposed unified model linking explosive events and spicules.
Abstract
We report spectroscopic observations in support of a novel view of transition region explosive events, observations that lend empirical evidence that at least in some cases explosive events may be nothing else than spinning narrow spicule-like structures. Our spectra of textbook explosive events with simultaneous Doppler flow of a red and of a blue component are extreme cases of high spectro-scopic velocities that lack apparent motion, to be expected if interpreted as a pair of collimated, linearly moving jets. The awareness of this conflict led us to the alternate interpretation of redshift and blueshift as spinning motion of a small plasma volume. In contrast to the bidirectional jet scenario, a small volume of spinning plasma would be fully compatible with the observation of flows without detectable apparent motion. We suspect that these small volumes could be spicule-like structures…
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