Evolution of Flare Ribbons, Electric Currents and Quasi-separatrix Layers During an X-class Flare
M. Janvier, A. Savcheva, E. Pariat, S. Tassev, S. Millholland, V., Bommier, P. McCauley, S. McKillop, and F. Dougan

TL;DR
This study combines observational data and magnetic field modeling to analyze the evolution of flare ribbons, electric currents, and QSLs during an X-class solar flare, confirming current increases and the effectiveness of NLFFF models in complex topologies.
Contribution
It presents a novel combined analysis of photospheric currents, flare ribbons, and QSLs using both observational data and magnetic field models for the first time.
Findings
Confirmed increase of electric currents during the flare's impulsive phase.
Demonstrated NLFFF models can capture key physical signatures of complex flares.
Showed QSLs and flare ribbons have similar morphology and evolution.
Abstract
The standard model for eruptive flares has in the past few years been extended to 3D. It predicts typical J-shaped photospheric footprints of the coronal current layer, forming at similar locations as the Quasi-Separatrix Layers (QSLs). Such a morphology is also found for flare ribbons observed in the EUV band, as well as in non-linear force-free field (NLFFF) magnetic field extrapolations and models. We study the evolution of the photospheric traces of the current density and flare ribbons, both obtained with the SDO instruments. We investigate the photospheric current evolution during the 6 September 2011 X-class flare (SOL2011-09-06T22:20) from observational data of the magnetic field obtained with HMI. This evolution is compared with that of the flare ribbons observed in the EUV filters of the AIA. We also compare the observed electric current density and the flare ribbon morphology…
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