Irreversible Rapid Changes of Magnetic Field Associated with the 2012 October 23 Circular Near-limb X1.8 Flare
Dandan Ye, Chang Liu, and Haimin Wang

TL;DR
This study analyzes the magnetic field evolution during the 2012 October 23 X1.8 flare near the solar limb, revealing irreversible magnetic changes consistent with the coronal implosion scenario and asymmetric circular-ribbon flare characteristics.
Contribution
It provides detailed magnetic field observations of a limb flare using high-cadence data, highlighting the collapse and reconfiguration of magnetic fields in a complex topology.
Findings
Negative flux decreases limb-ward and disk-ward after the flare
Horizontal magnetic fields increase along the disk-ward PIL
Magnetic fields collapse toward the surface above the PIL
Abstract
It has been found that photospheric magnetic fields can change in accordance with the three-dimensional magnetic field restructuring following solar eruptions. Previous studies mainly use vector magnetic field data taken for events near the disk center. In this paper, we analyze the magnetic field evolution associated with the 2012 October 23 X1.8 flare in NOAA AR 11598 that is close to the solar limb, using both the 45 s cadence line-of-sight and 12 minute cadence vector magnetograms from the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager on board Solar Dynamic Observatory. This flare is classified as a circular-ribbon flare with spine-fan type magnetic topology containing a null point. In the line-of-sight magnetograms, there are two apparent polarity inversion lines (PIL). The PIL closer to the limb is affected more by the projection effect. Between these two PILs there lie positive polarity…
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