From Pseudostreamer Jets to CMEs: Observations of the Breakout Continuum
Pankaj Kumar, Judith T. Karpen, Spiro K. Antiochos, Peter F. Wyper, C., Richard DeVore, and Benjamin J. Lynch

TL;DR
This study investigates the magnetic breakout model in solar eruptions, comparing jets and CMEs in pseudostreamer configurations, and identifies key observable signatures and energy factors influencing eruption types.
Contribution
The paper provides new observational signatures of breakout reconnection and analyzes the energy ratio as a determinant for eruption outcomes in pseudostreamers.
Findings
Coronal dimming and field line opening are signatures of breakout reconnection.
Region size, magnetic strength, and pre-eruptive evolution do not distinguish jets from CMEs.
The energy ratio of filament channel to overlying flux determines eruption type.
Abstract
The magnetic breakout model, in which reconnection in the corona leads to destabilization of a filament channel, explains numerous features of eruptive solar events, from small-scale jets to global-scale coronal mass ejections (CMEs). The underlying multipolar topology, pre-eruption activities, and sequence of magnetic reconnection onsets (first breakout, then flare) of many observed fast CMEs/eruptive flares are fully consistent with the model. Recently, we have demonstrated that most observed coronal-hole jets in fan/spine topologies also are induced by breakout reconnection at the null point above a filament channel (with or without a filament). For these two types of eruptions occurring in similar topologies, the key question is, why do some events generate jets while others form CMEs? We focused on the initiation of eruptions in large bright points/small active regions that were…
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