Magnetic reconnection between loops accelerated by a nearby filament eruption
Leping Li, Hardi Peter, Lakshmi Pradeep Chitta, Hongqiang Song, Kaifan, Ji, Yongyuan Xiang

TL;DR
This study observes how a nearby filament eruption accelerates magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere, leading to more energetic and faster reconnection processes with hotter plasmoids and increased energy conversion.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational evidence that a filament eruption can significantly accelerate magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere.
Findings
Reconnection rate increases from 0.18-0.3 to 0.57 after eruption.
Reconnection region heats up from 2 MK to 5.5 MK.
More and hotter plasmoids are observed post-eruption.
Abstract
Magnetic reconnection modulated by non-local disturbances in the solar atmosphere has been investigated theoretically, but rarely observed. In this study, employing Ha and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) images and line of sight magnetograms, we report acceleration of reconnection by adjacent filament eruption. In Ha images, four groups of chromospheric fibrils are observed to form a saddle-like structure. Among them, two groups of fibrils converge and reconnect. Two newly reconnected fibrils then form, and retract away from the reconnection region. In EUV images, similar structures and evolution of coronal loops are identified. Current sheet forms repeatedly at the interface of reconnecting loops, with width and length of 1-2 and 5.3-7.2 Mm, and reconnection rate of 0.18-0.3. It appears in the EUV low-temperature channels, with average differential emission measure (DEM) weighed temperature…
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