Analysis of UV and EUV emission from impacts on the Sun after 2011 June 7 eruptive flare
Davina Innes, Philipp Heinrich, Bernd Inhester, Li-Jia Guo

TL;DR
This study investigates UV and EUV emissions from solar impacts caused by filament eruption debris, revealing how impact velocity and magnetic environment influence emission intensities and ratios, with implications for stellar accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of impact emissions, linking UV/EUV ratios to impact velocity, magnetic fields, and plasma properties, offering new insights into impact dynamics and stellar accretion phenomena.
Findings
Impact velocities ranged from 230 to 450 km/s.
Bright EUV emission observed at all impact sites, UV only when reaching the chromosphere.
UV/EUV intensity ratio decreases with impact velocity and magnetic field strength.
Abstract
On 2011 June 7 debris from a large filament eruption fell back to the Sun causing bright ultraviolet (UV) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) splashes across the surface. These impacts may give clues on the process of stellar accretion. The aim is to investigate how the impact emission is influenced by structures in the falling ejecta and at the solar surface. We determine the UV and EUV light curves of a sample of impacts. The ballistic impact velocity is estimated from the ejection and landing times and, where possible, compared with the velocity derived by tracking the downflows in SDO/AIA and STEREO/EUVI images. Estimates of the column density before impact are made from the darkness of the falling plasma in the 193 A channel. The impact velocities were between 230 and 450 km/s. All impacts produced bright EUV emission at the impact site but bright UV was only observed when the impacting…
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