On the nature of transverse coronal waves revealed by wavefront dislocations
A. L\'opez Ariste, M. Luna, I. Arregui, E. Khomenko, M. Collados

TL;DR
This paper identifies wavefront dislocations in coronal waves observed via Doppler shifts, revealing that their presence is explained by interference between kink and sausage magnetohydrodynamic wave modes with different frequencies.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first observational evidence of wavefront dislocations in coronal waves and explains their origin through interference of specific wave modes.
Findings
Dislocations are observed in coronal waves via Doppler shift singularities.
Dislocations are caused by interference of kink and sausage wave modes.
Kink mode has smaller pressure amplitude but larger velocity than sausage mode.
Abstract
Coronal waves are an important aspect of the dynamics of the plasma in the corona. Wavefront dislocations are topological features of most waves in nature and also of magnetohydrodynamic waves. Are there dislocations in coronal waves? The finding and explanation of dislocations may shed light on the nature and characteristics of the propagating waves, their interaction in the corona and in general on the plasma dynamics. We positively identify dislocations in coronal waves observed by the Coronal Multi-channel Polarimeter (CoMP) as singularities in the Doppler shifts of emission coronal lines. We study the possible singularities that can be expected in coronal waves and try to reproduce the observed dislocations in terms of localization and frequency of appearance. The observed dislocations can only be explained by the interference of a kink and a sausage wave modes propagating with…
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