Measuring the magnetic origins of solar flares, CMEs and Space Weather
Philip Judge, Matthias Rempel, Rana Ezzeddine, Lucia Kleint, Ricky, Egeland, Svetlana Berdyugina, Thomas Berger, Joan Burkepile, Rebecca Centeno,, Giuliana de Toma, Mausumi Dikpati, Yuhong Fan, Holly Gilbert, Daniela, Lacatus

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of near-UV spectral lines and advanced modeling to better understand the magnetic origins of solar flares, CMEs, and space weather, proposing a new approach for magnetic field measurement.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method combining near-UV spectroscopy and multi-line analysis to infer magnetic fields in the solar chromosphere, improving space weather prediction capabilities.
Findings
Near-UV lines of Mg II, Fe II, and Fe I are effective for magnetic field diagnostics.
Multiple spectral lines can infer magnetic fields across different optical depths.
Space-borne instruments can significantly advance solar eruption predictions.
Abstract
We take a broad look at the problem of identifying the magnetic solar causes of space weather. With the lackluster performance of extrapolations based upon magnetic field measurements in the photosphere, we identify a region in the near UV part of the spectrum as optimal for studying the development of magnetic free energy over active regions. Using data from SORCE, Hubble Space Telescope, and SKYLAB, along with 1D computations of the near-UV (NUV) spectrum and numerical experiments based on the MURaM radiation-MHD and HanleRT radiative transfer codes, we address multiple challenges. These challenges are best met through a combination of near UV lines of bright \ion{Mg}{2}, and lines of \ion{Fe}{2} and \ion{Fe}{1} (mostly within the transition array) which form in the chromosphere up to K. Both Hanle and Zeeman effects can in principle be used to derive vector…
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