Simulating the Coronal Evolution of Bipolar Active Regions to Investigate the Formation of Flux Ropes
Stephanie L. Yardley, Duncan H. Mackay, Lucie M. Green

TL;DR
This study uses time-dependent nonlinear force-free field simulations driven by photospheric magnetograms to model the coronal evolution of bipolar active regions, successfully reproducing many observed features and eruption build-ups.
Contribution
It introduces a method to simulate coronal magnetic field evolution of active regions using observed magnetograms, improving eruption prediction accuracy.
Findings
Reproduced coronal features for 80% of ARs
Improved simulation-observation match by 20% with added physical effects
Successfully simulated eruption build-up in 50% of cases
Abstract
The coronal magnetic field evolution of 20 bipolar active regions (ARs) is simulated from their emergence to decay using the time-dependent nonlinear force-free field method of Mackay et al. A time sequence of cleaned photospheric line-of-sight magnetograms, that covers the entire evolution of each AR, is used to drive the simulation. A comparison of the simulated coronal magnetic field with the 171 and 193 A observations obtained by the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/ Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA), is made for each AR by manual inspection. The results show that it is possible to reproduce the evolution of the main coronal features such as small- and large-scale coronal loops, filaments and sheared structures for 80% of the ARs. Varying the boundary and initial conditions, along with the addition of physical effects such as Ohmic diffusion, hyperdiffusion and a horizontal…
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