Various Local Heating Events in the Earliest Phase of Flux Emergence
Shin Toriumi, Yukio Katsukawa, Mark C.M. Cheung

TL;DR
This study investigates local heating events in emerging flux regions using multi-instrument solar observations, revealing different magnetic and dynamic characteristics linked to magnetic reconnection and shock processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence connecting magnetic field configurations with heating events in flux emergence, highlighting the roles of reconnection and shocks.
Findings
Bi-directional jets suggest magnetic reconnection in the flux center.
Peripheral bright points show Doppler redshifts indicating shocks or compressions.
Heating events are associated with specific magnetic topologies like bald patches.
Abstract
Emerging flux regions (EFRs) are known to exhibit various sporadic local heating events in the lower atmosphere. To investigate the characteristics of these events, especially to link the photospheric magnetic fields and atmospheric dynamics, we analyze Hinode, IRIS, and SDO data of a new EFR in NOAA AR 12401. Out of 151 bright points (BPs) identified in Hinode/SOT Ca images, 29 are overlapped by an SOT/SP scan. Seven BPs in the EFR center possess mixed-polarity magnetic backgrounds in the photosphere. Their IRIS UV spectra (e.g., Si IV 1402.8 A) are strongly enhanced and red- or blue-shifted with tails reaching +/- 150 km/s, which is highly suggestive of bi-directional jets, and each brightening lasts for 10 - 15 minutes leaving flare-like light curves. Most of this group show bald patches, the U-shaped photospheric magnetic loops. Another 10 BPs are found in unipolar regions at the…
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