Slipping Magnetic Reconnection of Flux Rope Structures as a Precursor to an Eruptive X-class Solar Flare
Ting Li, Kai Yang, Yijun Hou, Jun Zhang

TL;DR
This study observes quasi-periodic slipping magnetic reconnection along flux rope-related QSLs before an X-class solar flare, linking reconnection dynamics to the eruption process.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of slipping magnetic reconnection along QSLs as a precursor to solar eruptions.
Findings
Slipping motion occurred at 30-40 km/s with a 130s period.
Reconnection downflows indicated by Si IV line redshift and broadening.
Flux rope eruption followed the slipping reconnection, leading to a major flare.
Abstract
We present the quasi-periodic slipping motion of flux rope structures prior to the onset of an eruptive X-class flare on 2015 March 11, obtained by the \emph{Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph} (\emph{IRIS}) and the \emph{Solar Dynamics Observatory} (\emph{SDO}). The slipping motion occurred at the north part of the flux rope and seemed to successively peel off the flux rope. The speed of the slippage was 3040 km s, with an average period of 13030 s. The Si {\sc iv} 1402.77 {\AA} line showed a redshift of 1030 km s and a line width of 50120 km s at the west legs of slipping structures, indicative of reconnection downflow. The slipping motion lasted about 40 min and the flux rope started to rise up slowly at the late stage of the slippage. Then an X2.1 flare was initiated and the flux rope was impulsively accelerated. One of the flare ribbons swept…
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