The Bi-directional Moving Structures in a Coronal Bright Point
Dong Li, Zongjun Ning, Yingna Su

TL;DR
This study reports bi-directional moving structures in a coronal bright point observed by SDO/AIA, supporting magnetic reconnection as the underlying mechanism, with detailed analysis of their speed, periodicity, and multi-wavelength consistency.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observation and analysis of bi-directional flows in a coronal bright point, confirming magnetic reconnection as the cause.
Findings
Average speed of moving structures ~300 km/s
Periodicity of about 90 seconds
Simultaneous detection across 9 wavelengths
Abstract
We report the bi-directional moving structures in a coronal bright point (CBP) on 2015 July 14. It is observed by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) onboard Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). This CBP has a lifetime of about 10 minutes, and a curved shape. The observations show that many bright structures are moving intermittently outward from the CBP brightness core. Such moving structures are clearly seen at AIA 171, 193, 211, 131, 94, 335 and 304 A, slit-jaw (SJI) 1330 and 1400 A. In order to analyze these moving structures, the CBP is cut along the moving direction with a curved slit from the AIA and SJI images. Then we can obtain the time-distance slices, including the intensity and intensity-derivative diagrams, from which, the moving structures are recognized as the oblique streaks, and they are characterized by the bi-direction, simultaneity, symmetry, and periodicity. The…
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