The Source Locations of Major Flares and CMEs in the Emerging Active Regions
Lijuan Liu, Yuming Wang, Zhenjun Zhou, Jun Cui

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of major solar flares and CMEs in emerging active regions, emphasizing the role of collisional shearing between bipoles and its correlation with flare intensity.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that collisional shearing between bipoles is a common and significant driver of major solar activities in emerging active regions.
Findings
Major flares and CMEs originate from collisional PILs formed by bipole interactions.
84% of cases show collisional length longer than 18 Mm prior to eruptions.
Flare magnitude correlates positively with the collisional length of active PILs.
Abstract
Major flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) tend to originate from the compact polarity inversion lines (PILs) in the solar active regions (ARs). Recently, a scenario named as "collisional shearing" is proposed by \citet{Chintzoglou_2019} to explain the phenomenon, which suggests that the collision between different emerging bipoles is able to form the compact PIL, driving the shearing and flux cancellation that are responsible to the subsequent large activities. In this work, through tracking the evolution of 19 emerging ARs from their birth until they produce the first major flares or CMEs, we investigated the source PILs of the activities, i.e., the active PILs, to explore the generality of "collisional shearing". We find that none of the active PILs is the self PIL (sPIL) of a single bipole. We further find that 11 eruptions originate from the collisional PILs (cPILs) formed due…
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