Coronal condensations caused by magnetic reconnection between solar coronal loops
Leping Li, Jun Zhang, Hardi Peter, Lakshmi Pradeep Chitta, Jiangtao, Su, Chun Xia, Hongqiang Song, Yijun Hou

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength solar observations to show that magnetic reconnection between coronal loops causes plasma cooling, condensation, and downflows, revealing a key process in the solar corona's mass cycle.
Contribution
It demonstrates how magnetic reconnection actively induces plasma condensation and mass cycling in the solar corona, integrating thermal and magnetic evolution.
Findings
Magnetic reconnection triggers plasma cooling and condensation.
Coronal plasma cools from ~0.9 MK to ~0.05 MK during reconnection.
Condensed plasma can rain back to the solar surface along reconnected loops.
Abstract
Employing Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) multi-wavelength images, we report the coronal condensation during the magnetic reconnection (MR) between a system of open and closed coronal loops. Higher-lying magnetically open structures, observed in AIA 171 A images above the solar limb, move downward and interact with the lower-lying closed loops, resulting in the formation of dips in the former. An X-type structure forms at the interface. The interacting loops reconnect and disappear. Two sets of newly-reconnected loops then form and recede from the MR region. During the MR process, bright emission appears sequentially in the AIA 131 A and 304 A channels repeatedly in the dips of higher-lying open structures. This indicates the cooling and condensation process of hotter plasma from ~0.9 MK down to ~0.6 MK, and then to ~0.05 MK, also supported by the…
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