A Study of Fast Flareless Coronal Mass Ejections
H. Q. Song, Y. Chen, D. D. Ye, G. Q. Han, G. H. Du, G. Li, J. Zhang, and Q. Hu

TL;DR
This study investigates flareless, fast CMEs in quiet Sun regions, finding that ideal flux rope instability, rather than magnetic reconnection, primarily drives their acceleration, challenging traditional CME models.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that ideal flux rope instability dominates CME acceleration in quiet Sun regions, highlighting a different mechanism from flare-associated CMEs.
Findings
Fast flareless CMEs are linked to quiet Sun eruptions.
Reconnection electric fields are weak and short-lived in these events.
Magnetic energy release mainly occurs via flux rope instability.
Abstract
Two major processes have been proposed to convert the coronal magnetic energy into the kinetic energy of a coronal mass ejection (CME): resistive magnetic reconnection and ideal macroscopic magnetohydrodynamic instability of magnetic flux rope. However, it remains elusive whether both processes play a comparable role or one of them prevails during a particular eruption. To shed light on this issue, we carefully studied energetic but flareless CMEs, \textit{i.e.}, fast CMEs not accompanied by any flares. Through searching the Coordinated Data Analysis Workshops (CDAW) database of CMEs observed in Solar Cycle 23, we found 13 such events with speeds larger than 1000 km s. Other common observational features of these events are: (1) none of them originated in active regions; they were associated with eruptions of well-developed long filaments in quiet-Sun regions, (2) no apparent…
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