Magnetic helicity estimations in models and observations of the solar magnetic field. Part IV: Application to solar observations
J. K. Thalmann, M. K. Georgoulis, Y. Liu, E. Pariat, G. Valori, S., Anfinogentov, F. Chen, Y. Guo, K. Moraitis, S. Yang, A. Mastrano

TL;DR
This study compares multiple magnetic helicity calculation methods on solar observations, validating their consistency and interpreting the role of helicity in a major solar eruption.
Contribution
It systematically applies and cross-validates different magnetic helicity estimation methods on high-quality solar data, providing insights into their agreement and the helicity's role in eruptions.
Findings
Strong agreement among finite-volume methods
Moderate agreement between connectivity-based and finite-volume methods
Flux-integration methods show excellent agreement
Abstract
In this ISSI-supported series of studies on magnetic helicity in the Sun, we systematically implement different magnetic helicity calculation methods on high-quality solar magnetogram observations. We apply finite-volume, discrete flux tube (in particular, connectivity-based) and flux-integration methods to data from Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope. The target is NOAA active region 10930 during a ~1.5 day interval in December 2006 that included a major eruptive flare (SOL2006-12-13T02:14X3.4). Finite-volume and connectivity-based methods yield instantaneous budgets of the coronal magnetic helicity, while the flux-integration methods allow an estimate of the accumulated helicity injected through the photosphere. The objectives of our work are twofold: A cross-validation of methods, as well as an interpretation of the complex events leading to the eruption. To the first objective, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Solar Radiation and Photovoltaics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
