3D Reconstruction of a Rotating Erupting Prominence
W. T. Thompson, B. Kliem, and T. T\"or\"ok

TL;DR
This study reconstructs a rotating erupting solar prominence using stereoscopic observations, revealing the prominence's twist, rotation profile, and structure, and compares these with numerical flux rope simulations.
Contribution
First 3D reconstruction of a rotating erupting prominence, providing detailed rotation profile and flux rope structure analysis.
Findings
Prominence rotated about the line of sight during eruption.
Two-thirds of total rotation occurred within 0.5 solar radii.
Reconstructed features match numerical flux rope simulations.
Abstract
A bright prominence associated with a coronal mass ejection (CME) was seen erupting from the Sun on 9 April 2008. This prominence was tracked by both the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) EUVI and COR1 telescopes, and was seen to rotate about the line of sight as it erupted; therefore, the event has been nicknamed the "Cartwheel CME." The threads of the prominence in the core of the CME quite clearly indicate the structure of a weakly to moderately twisted flux rope throughout the field of view, up to heliocentric heights of 4 solar radii. Although the STEREO separation was 48 degrees, it was possible to match some sharp features in the later part of the eruption as seen in the 304 {\AA} line in EUVI and in the H\alpha-sensitive bandpass of COR1 by both STEREO Ahead and Behind. These features could then be traced out in three-dimensional space, and reprojected into a view…
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