A Coronal Mass Ejection followed by a prominence eruption and a plasma blob as observed by Solar Orbiter
A. Bemporad, V. Andretta, R. Susino, S. Mancuso, D. Spadaro, M., Mierla, D. Berghmans, E. D'Huys, A. N. Zhukov, D.-C. Talpeanu, R. Colaninno,, P. Hess, J. Koza, S. Jejcic, P. Heinzel, E. Antonucci, V. Da Deppo, S., Fineschi, F. Frassati, G. Jerse, F. Landini, G. Naletto

TL;DR
This study combines multi-instrument observations from Solar Orbiter and other spacecraft to analyze two solar eruptions, revealing new insights into plasma behavior, 3D structure, and post-CME current sheet formation.
Contribution
It introduces novel 3D reconstruction methods and applies the polarization ratio technique to Metis data, providing new details on plasma temperature and structure during eruptions.
Findings
First 3D tracking of eruptions from source to expansion.
Detection of post-CME current sheet formation in the intermediate corona.
Measurement of plasma temperature gradients in a propagating plasma blob.
Abstract
On February 12, 2021 two subsequent eruptions occurred above the West limb, as seen along the Sun-Earth line. The first event was a typical slow Coronal Mass Ejection (CME), followed hours later by a smaller and collimated prominence eruption, originating Southward with respect to the CME, followed by a plasma blob. These events were observed not only by SOHO and STEREO-A missions, but also by the suite of remote sensing instruments on-board Solar Orbiter (SolO). This work shows how data acquired by the Full Sun Imager (FSI), Metis coronagraph, and Heliospheric Imager (SoloHI) from the SolO perspective can be combined to study the eruptions and the different source regions. Moreover, we show how Metis data can be analyzed to provide new information about solar eruptions. Different 3D reconstruction methods were applied to the data acquired by different spacecraft including…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
