Limb Event Brightenings and Fast Ejection Using IRIS Mission Observations
E. Tavabi, S. Koutchmy, L. Golub

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution IRIS observations to analyze limb event brightenings and macrospicule ejections, revealing bidirectional jets from small reconnection sites in the solar atmosphere.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic and imaging analysis of limb brightenings and macrospicules, highlighting the role of small-scale reconnection in jet formation.
Findings
Detection of high-velocity up to 100 km/s plasma jets
Observation of bidirectional flows from reconnection sites
Correlation between spectral shifts and eruptive spicule activity
Abstract
The Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) of the NASA small explorer mission provides significantly more complete and higher resolution spectral coverage of the dynamical conditions inside the chromosphere and transition region (TR) than has heretofore been available. Near the solar limb high temporal, spatial (0.3") and spectral resolution observations from the ultraviolet IRIS spectra reveal high-energy limb event brightenings (LEBs) at low chromospheric heights, around 1 Mm above the limb. They can be characterized as explosive events producing jets. We selected two events showing spectra of a confined eruption just off or near the quiet Sun limb, the jet part showing obvious moving material with short duration large Doppler shifts in three directions identified as macrospicules on slit-jaw (SJ) images in Si IV and He II 304 A. The events are analyzed from a sequence of very…
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