Thermal signatures of tether-cutting reconnections in pre-eruption coronal flux ropes: hot central voids in coronal cavities
Y. Fan

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to explore how tether-cutting reconnections create hot central voids in coronal cavities, providing insights into pre-eruption signatures and flux rope evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that thermal signatures like hot central voids are direct results of tether-cutting reconnections in the hyperbolic flux tube topology during flux rope evolution.
Findings
Hot, low-density channels form along the flux rope axis.
Central voids grow and rise with reconnections until eruption.
Thermal features match observed coronal cavity structures.
Abstract
Using a 3D MHD simulation, we model the quasi-static evolution and the onset of eruption of a coronal flux rope. The simulation begins with a twisted flux rope emerging at the lower boundary and pushing into a pre-existing coronal potential arcade field. At a chosen time the emergence is stopped with the lower boundary taken to be rigid. Then the coronal flux rope settles into a quasi-static rise phase during which an underlying, central sigmoid-shaped current layer forms along the so called hyperbolic flux tube (HFT), a generalization of the X-line configuration. Reconnections in the dissipating current layer effectively add twisted flux to the flux rope and thus allow it to rise quasi-statically, even though the magnetic energy is decreasing as the system relaxes. We examine the thermal features produced by the current layer formation and the associated "tether-cutting" reconnections…
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