Formation and Eruption of a Small Flux Rope in the Chromosphere Observed by NST, IRIS, and SDO
Pankaj Kumar, Vasyl Yurchyshyn, Haimin Wang, Kyung-Suk Cho

TL;DR
This study provides direct observational evidence of chromospheric flux rope formation via magnetic reconnection at the PIL, followed by its eruption during a subsequent flare, using high-resolution solar imaging.
Contribution
First detailed observation of chromospheric flux rope formation and eruption linked to magnetic reconnection and flux cancellation in solar active regions.
Findings
Chromospheric reconnection leads to flux rope formation.
Flux cancellation correlates with flux rope eruption.
Flux rope erupts during a secondary flare after formation.
Abstract
Using high-resolution images from 1.6 m New Solar Telescope (NST) at Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO), we report the direct evidence of chromospheric reconnection at the polarity inversion line (PIL) between two small opposite polarity sunspots. Small jet-like structures (with velocities of ~20-55 km/s) were observed at the reconnection site before the onset of the first M1.0 flare. The slow rise of untwisting jets was followed by the onset of cool plasma inflow (~10 km/s) at the reconnection site, causing the onset of a two-ribbon flare. The reconnection between two sheared J-shaped cool H loops causes the formation of a small twisted flux rope (S shaped) in the chromosphere. In addition, Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) magnetograms show the flux cancellation (both positive and negative) during the first M1.0 flare. The emergence of negative flux and cancellation of…
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