The 3D geometry of active region upflows deduced from their limb-to-limb evolution
P. Demoulin, D. Baker, C. H. Mandrini, L. van Driel-Gesztelyi

TL;DR
This study uses limb-to-limb observations from Hinode to analyze the 3D geometry of active region upflows, revealing their fan-like structure rooted in quasi separatrix layers and driven by magnetic reconnection.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 3D geometrical characterization of active region upflows using limb-to-limb data and links these flows to magnetic reconnection processes at QSLs.
Findings
Flows are thin, fan-like structures rooted in QSLs.
Highest velocities increase with temperature.
Flow evolution is mainly due to solar rotation changing the viewpoint.
Abstract
We analyse the evolution of coronal plasma upflows from the edges of AR 10978, which has the best limb-to-limb data coverage with Hinode's EUV Imaging Spectrometer (EIS). We find that the observed evolution is largely due to the solar rotation progressively changing the viewpoint of nearly stationary flows. From the systematic changes in the upflow regions as a function of distance from disc centre, we deduce their 3D geometrical properties as inclination and angular spread in three coronal lines (SiVII, FeXII, FeXV). In agreement with magnetic extrapolations, we find that the flows are thin, fan-like structures rooted in quasi separatrix layers (QSLs). The fans are tilted away from the AR centre. The highest plasma velocities in these three spectral lines have similar magnitudes and their heights increase with temperature. The spatial location and extent of the upflow regions in the…
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