H$\alpha$ and EUV observations of a partial CME
Damian J. Christian, David B. Jess, Patrick Antolin, Mihalis, Mathioudakis

TL;DR
This study combines high-resolution Hα and EUV observations to analyze a partial coronal mass ejection, revealing large downflowing condensations, their properties, and implications for the eruption's partial nature.
Contribution
It provides detailed multi-wavelength observations of a partial CME, highlighting the dynamics of returning chromospheric material and its differences from typical CMEs.
Findings
Detected large downflows of chromospheric material at ~200 km/s
Found smaller unresolved condensations consistent with simulations
Estimated kinetic energy much lower than typical CMEs
Abstract
We have obtained H high spatial and time resolution observations of the upper solar chromosphere and supplemented these with multi-wavelength observations from the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO) and the {\it Hinode} ExtremeUltraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS). The H observations were conducted on 11 February 2012 with the Hydrogen-Alpha Rapid Dynamics Camera (HARDcam) instrument at the National Solar Observatory's Dunn Solar Telescope. Our H observations found large downflows of chromospheric material returning from coronal heights following a failed prominence eruption. We have detected several large condensations ("blobs") returning to the solar surface at velocities of 200 km s in both H and several SDO AIA band passes. The average derived size of these "blobs" in H is 500 by 3000 km in the directions perpendicular and…
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