Structure and Dynamics of the 13/14 November 2012 Eclipse White-Light Corona
Jay M. Pasachoff, Vojtech Rusin, Metod Saniga, Bryce A. Babcock,, Muzhou Lu, Allen B. Davis, Ronald F. Dantowitz, Pavlos Gaintatzis, John H., Seiradakis, Aristeidis Voulgaris, Daniel B. Seaton, Kazuo Shiota

TL;DR
This study presents detailed observations of the solar corona during the 2012 eclipse, analyzing coronal features, mass ejection velocities, and magnetic field models, with comparisons to space-based solar imaging data.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution eclipse images, measures coronal mass ejection velocities, and validates magnetic field models against multi-instrument solar observations.
Findings
Coronal mass ejection speed measured at 413 km/s.
Confirmed the magnetic field model's predictions with eclipse data.
Coronal features consistent with space-based solar images.
Abstract
Continuing our series of observations of the motion and dynamics of the solar corona over the solar-activity cycle, we observed the corona from sites in Queensland, Australia, during the 13 (UT)/14 (local time) November 2012 total solar eclipse. The corona took the low-ellipticity shape typical of solar maximum (flattening index {\epsilon} = 0.01), showing a change from the composite coronal images that we had observed and analyzed in this journal and elsewhere for the 2006, 2008, 2009, and 2010 eclipses. After crossing the northeast Australian coast, the rest of the path of totality was over the ocean, so further totality was seen only by shipborne observers. Our results include measurements of velocities of a coronal mass ejection; during the 36 minutes of passage from the Queensland coast to a ship north of New Zealand, we find a speed of 413 km/s, and we analyze its dynamics. We…
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