Observations of Multiple Surges Associated with Magnetic Activities in AR10484 on 25 October 2003
Wahab Uddin, B. Schmieder, R. Chandra, Abhishek K. Srivastava, Pankaj, Kumar, S. Bisht

TL;DR
This study investigates multiple surges in active region NOAA 10484 on 25 October 2003, linking magnetic activities, subflares, and reconnection processes across multiple wavelengths, revealing their confined nature and limited impact on solar wind.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multiwavelength analysis of surge phenomena, highlighting magnetic reconnection as the driver and detailing the magnetic topology involved.
Findings
Surges are associated with subflares and magnetic reconnection.
Surge ejection speeds reach up to 200 km/s.
Surges are confined to closed magnetic field lines, limiting their impact on the solar wind.
Abstract
We present a multiwavelength study of recurrent surges observed in H{\alpha}, UV (SOHO/EIT) and Radio (Learmonth, Australia) from the super-active region NOAA 10484 on 25 October, 2003. Several bright structures visible in H{\alpha} and UV corresponding to subflares are also observed at the base of each surge. Type III bursts are triggered and RHESSI X-ray sources are evident with surge activity. The major surge consists of the bunches of ejective paths forming a fan-shape region with an angular size of (\approx 65\degree) during its maximum phase. The ejection speed reaches upto \sim200 km/s. The SOHO/MDI magnetograms reveal that a large dipole emerges east side of the active region on 18-20 October 2003, a few days before the surges. On October 25, 2003, the major sunspots were surrounded by "moat regions" with moving magnetic features (MMFs). Parasitic fragmented positive polarities…
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