Magnetic Reconnection resulting from Flux Emergence: Implications for Jet Formation in the lower solar atmosphere?
J. Y. Ding, M. S. Madjarska, J. G. Doyle, Q. M. Lu, K. Vanninathan,, and Z. Huang

TL;DR
This study uses 2.5D MHD simulations to investigate how magnetic reconnection triggered by flux emergence can produce jet-like features in the lower solar atmosphere, with results matching observed jet properties.
Contribution
It demonstrates that magnetic reconnection can generate various jet phenomena in the chromosphere and transition region by adjusting magnetic field strength and plasma density.
Findings
Reconnection produces jets with velocities up to 90 km/s.
Jets exhibit temperatures from 20,000 K to 600,000 K.
Model reproduces features like fibrils, spicules, and X-ray jets.
Abstract
We aim at investigating the formation of jet-like features in the lower solar atmosphere, e.g. chromosphere and transition region, as a result of magnetic reconnection. Magnetic reconnection as occurring at chromospheric and transition regions densities and triggered by magnetic flux emergence is studied using a 2.5D MHD code. The initial atmosphere is static and isothermal, with a temperature of 20,000 K. The initial magnetic field is uniform and vertical. Two physical environments with different magnetic field strength (25 G and 50 G) are presented. In each case, two sub-cases are discussed, where the environments have different initial mass density. In the case where we have a weaker magnetic field (25 G) and higher plasma density ( cm), valid for the typical quiet Sun chromosphere, a plasma jet would be observed with a temperature of 2--3 K…
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