Disconnecting Solar Magnetic Flux
C. E. DeForest, T. A. Howard, D. J. McComas

TL;DR
This study images and analyzes magnetic flux disconnection events caused by reconnection in the solar corona, quantifying their rate and impact on heliospheric magnetic flux balance during solar minimum.
Contribution
It provides direct imaging and modeling of magnetic flux disconnection events, estimating their frequency and contribution to heliospheric flux changes.
Findings
Disconnection events produce dense plasma clouds traceable from the corona to 1.2 AU.
Estimated flux disconnection rate is 6x10^13 Wb/year, affecting heliospheric magnetic flux.
Event rate is approximately 1 per day during solar minimum.
Abstract
Disconnection of open magnetic flux by reconnection is required to balance the injection of open flux by CMEs and other eruptive events. Making use of recent advances in heliospheric background subtraction, we have imaged many abrupt disconnection events. These events produce dense plasma clouds whose distinctie shape can now be traced from the corona across the inner solar system via heliospheric imaging. The morphology of each initial event is characteristic of magnetic reconnection across a current sheet, and the newly-disconnected flux takes the form of a "U"-shaped loop that moves outward, accreting coronal and solar wind material. We analyzed one such event on 2008 December 18 as it formed and accelerated at 20 m/s^2 to 320 km/s, expanding self-similarly until it exited our field of view 1.2 AU from the Sun. From acceleration and photometric mass estimates we derive the coronal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
