Evidence of Twisted flux-tube Emergence in Active Regions
Mariano Poisson, Cristina H. Mandrini, Pascal D\'emoulin, Marcelo, L\'opez Fuentes

TL;DR
This study introduces a new method to analyze magnetic tongues in emerging active regions, revealing that most flux-tubes have low twist, which constrains models of magnetic flux emergence.
Contribution
A novel, systematic approach to quantify magnetic tongues and estimate flux-tube twist in active regions from magnetogram data.
Findings
Most active regions have flux-tubes with less than one turn of twist.
Magnetic tongues have a minor influence on the overall AR tilt angle.
The evolution of the PIL effectively indicates the presence of tongues and flux-tube twist.
Abstract
Elongated magnetic polarities are observed during the emergence phase of bipolar active regions (ARs). These extended features, called magnetic tongues, are interpreted as a consequence of the azimuthal component of the magnetic flux in the toroidal flux-tubes that form ARs. We develop a new systematic and user-independent method to identify AR tongues. Our method is based on determining and analyzing the evolution of the AR main polarity inversion line (PIL). The effect of the tongues is quantified by measuring the acute angle [ tau] between the orientation of the PIL and the direction orthogonal to the AR main bipolar axis. We apply a simple model to simulate the emergence of a bipolar AR. This model lets us interpret the effect of magnetic tongues on parameters that characterize ARs ( e.g. the PIL inclination and the tilt angles, and their evolution). In this idealized kinematic…
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