How Can Active Region Plasma Escape into the Solar Wind from below a Closed Helmet Streamer?
C.H. Mandrini, F.A. Nuevo, A.M. V\'asquez, P. D\'emoulin and, L. van Driel-Gesztelyi, D. Baker, J.L. Culhane, G.D. Cristiani and, M. Pick

TL;DR
This study investigates how active region plasma can escape into the solar wind from below a closed streamer, revealing that a sequence of magnetic reconnections can facilitate this process even when it seems unlikely.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed topology analysis showing that plasma can bypass streamer separatrices via multiple reconnection steps, supported by radio observations.
Findings
AR plasma can reach the solar wind through multi-step reconnections.
Radio data shows evidence of initial reconnection but not the second step.
Indirect escape channels are possible despite apparent barriers.
Abstract
Recent studies show that active-region (AR) upflowing plasma, observed by the EUV-Imaging Spectrometer (EIS), onboard Hinode, can gain access to open field-lines and be released into the solar wind (SW) via magnetic-interchange reconnection at magnetic null-points in pseudo-streamer configurations. When only one bipolar AR is present on the Sun and it is fully covered by the separatrix of a streamer, such as AR 10978 in December 2007, it seems unlikely that the upflowing AR plasma can find its way into the slow SW. However, signatures of plasma with AR composition have been found at 1 AU by Culhane et al. (2014) apparently originating from the West of AR 10978. We present a detailed topology analysis of AR 10978 and the surrounding large-scale corona based on a potential-field source-surface (PFSS) model. Our study shows that it is possible for the AR plasma to get around the streamer…
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