Bright hot impacts by erupted fragments falling back on the Sun: magnetic channelling
A. Petralia, F. Reale, S. Orlando, P. Testa

TL;DR
This study models the impact of falling plasma fragments on the Sun, revealing how magnetic fields channel and brighten these impacts, offering insights into solar plasma dynamics and magnetic field structures.
Contribution
We develop a 3D-MHD model of plasma fragments falling in a magnetic field, explaining observed brightening and deformation during impacts near active regions.
Findings
Magnetic channeling explains observed brightening before impact.
Fragments deform and fragment further when ram pressure matches magnetic pressure.
Model matches observed EUV emission, constraining magnetic field and density.
Abstract
Dense plasma fragments were observed to fall back on the solar surface by the Solar Dynamics Observatory after an eruption on 7 June 2011, producing strong EUV brightenings. Previous studies investigated impacts in regions of weak magnetic field. Here we model the km/s impact of fragments channelled by the magnetic field close to active regions. In the observations, the magnetic channel brightens before the fragment impact. We use a 3D-MHD model of spherical blobs downfalling in a magnetized atmosphere. The blob parameters are constrained from the observation. We run numerical simulations with different ambient density and magnetic field intensity. We compare the model emission in the 171\AA~ channel of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly with the observed one. We find that a model of downfall channelled in a MK coronal loop confined by a magnetic field of G,…
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