Magnetic Flux and Magnetic Non-potentiality of Active Regions in Eruptive and Confined Solar Flares
Ting Li, Anqin Chen, Yijun Hou, Astrid M. Veronig, Shuhong Yang and, Jun Zhang

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetic properties of active regions influence whether solar flares are eruptive or confined, revealing that larger magnetic flux correlates with a higher likelihood of confinement and that certain non-potential parameters are indicative of flare behavior.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical analysis linking active region magnetic flux and non-potential parameters to flare eruptiveness, enhancing understanding of flare confinement mechanisms.
Findings
Flare-CME association rate decreases with increasing AR magnetic flux.
Confined flares have larger non-potential parameters than eruptive ones.
Active region flux is a key indicator of flare eruptiveness.
Abstract
With the aim of understanding how the magnetic properties of active regions (ARs) control the eruptive character of solar flares, we analyze 719 flares of Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) class C5.0 during 20102019. We carry out the first statistical study that investigates the flare-coronal mass ejections (CMEs) association rate as function of the flare intensity and the AR characteristics that produces the flare, in terms of its total unsigned magnetic flux (). Our results show that the slope of the flare-CME association rate with flare intensity reveals a steep monotonic decrease with . This means that flares of the same GOES class but originating from an AR of larger , are much more likely confined. Based on an AR flux as high as 1.0 Mx for solar-type stars, we estimate that the CME association…
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