A Magnetic Reconnection model for Hot Explosions in the Cool Atmosphere of the Sun
Lei Ni, Yajie Chen, Hardi Peter, Hui Tian, Jun Lin

TL;DR
This paper models magnetic reconnection in the Sun's low atmosphere, explaining UV bursts and Ellerman bombs through turbulent plasmoid instability and multi-thermal plasma mixing, aligning with recent observations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed magnetic reconnection model incorporating plasmoid instability and turbulence, explaining multi-thermal phenomena in solar atmospheric events.
Findings
Reconnection leads to coexisting hot and cold plasmas at similar heights.
Synthesized Si IV line profiles match observed UV burst features.
Realistic magnetic diffusivity is essential for accurate modeling.
Abstract
UV bursts and Ellerman bombs are transient brightenings observed in the low solar atmospheres of emerging flux regions. Observations have discovered the cospatial and cotemporal EBs and UV bursts, and their formation mechanisms are still not clear. The multi-thermal components with a large temperature span in these events challenge our understanding of magnetic reconnection and heating mechanisms in the low solar atmosphere. We have studied magnetic reconnection between the emerging and background magnetic fields. The initial plasma parameters are based on the C7 atmosphere model. After the current sheet with dense photosphere plasma is emerged to Mm above the solar surface, plasmoid instability appears. The plasmoids collide and coalesce with each other, which makes the plasmas with different densities and temperatures mixed up in the turbulent reconnection region. Therefore, the…
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