Propagating Waves Transverse to the Magnetic Field in a Solar Prominence
B. Schmieder, T.A. Kucera, K. Knizhnik, M. Luna, A. Lopez-Ariste and, D. Toot

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation of transverse propagating waves in a solar prominence pillar, interpreted as fast magneto-sonic waves, revealing new insights into prominence wave dynamics and magnetic field interactions.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of waves propagating perpendicular to the magnetic field in a solar prominence, supported by multi-instrument data and wave interpretation.
Findings
Waves propagate vertically at about 10 km/s
Waves have a period of approximately 300 seconds
Waves are consistent with fast magneto-sonic mode
Abstract
We report an unusual set of observations of waves in a large prominence pillar which consist of pulses propagating perpendicular to the prominence magnetic field. We observe a huge quiescent prominence with the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) in EUV on 2012 October 10 and only a part of it, the pillar, which is a foot or barb of the prominence, with the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) (in Ca II and H\alpha lines), Sac Peak (in H\alpha, H\beta\ and Na-D lines), THEMIS ("T\'elescope H\'eliographique pour l' Etude du Magn\'etisme et des Instabilit\'es Solaires") with the MTR (MulTi-Raies) spectropolarimeter (in He D_3 line). The THEMIS/MTR data indicates that the magnetic field in the pillar is essentially horizontal and the observations in the optical domain show a large number of horizontally aligned features on a much smaller scale than the…
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