Hi-C 2.1 Observations of Small-Scale Miniature-Filament-Eruption-Like Cool Ejections in Active Region Plage
Alphonse C. Sterling, Ronald L. Moore, Navdeep K. Panesar, Kevin P., Reardon, Momchil Molnar, Laurel A. Rachmeler, Sabrina L. Savage, and Amy R., Winebarger

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution solar imaging to observe small-scale cool ejections in active region plage, revealing their properties, possible origins, and relation to known solar features like fibrils and jets.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of miniature filament-like ejections, comparing them with existing phenomena and exploring their magnetic and dynamic origins.
Findings
Cool ejections have average widths of 3.2 arcseconds.
They reach maximum heights of 4.3 arcseconds and velocities around 23 km/s.
These features are not associated with magnetic neutral lines, suggesting alternative formation mechanisms.
Abstract
We examine 172 Ang ultra-high-resolution images of a solar plage region from the Hi-C 2.1 ("Hi-C") rocket flight of 2018 May 29. Over its five-minute flight, Hi-C resolves a plethora of small-scale dynamic features that appear near noise level in concurrent Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) 171 Ang images. For ten selected events, comparisons with AIA images at other wavelengths and with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) images indicate that these features are cool (compared to the corona) ejections. Combining Hi-C 172 Ang, AIA 171 Ang, IRIS 1400 Ang, and H, we see that these ten cool ejections are similar to the H "dynamic fibrils" and Ca ii "anemone jets" found in earlier studies. The front of some of our cool ejections are likely heated, showing emission in IRIS 1400 Ang. On average, these cool ejections have…
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