The chromosphere underneath a Coronal Bright Point
Souvik Bose, Daniel N\'obrega-Siverio, Bart De Pontieu, and Luc Rouppe, van der Voort

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution observations of chromospheric spicules beneath Coronal Bright Points, revealing their alignment with magnetic structures and their role in propagating disturbances affecting the corona.
Contribution
First high-resolution imaging of spicules in Hβ showing their connection to CBP magnetic structures and their influence on coronal dynamics.
Findings
Spicules are abundant near CBP footpoints and aligned with EUV loops.
Coronal disturbances are associated with spicule activity, affecting EUV emission.
Small-scale flux emergence influences spicule activity and CBP dynamics.
Abstract
Coronal Bright Points (CBPs) are sets of small-scale coronal loops, connecting opposite magnetic polarities, primarily characterized by their enhanced extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) and X-ray emission. Being ubiquitous, they are thought to play an important role in heating the solar corona. We aim at characterizing the barely-explored chromosphere underneath CBPs, focusing on the related spicular activity and on the effects of small-scale magnetic flux emergence on CBPs. We used high-resolution observations of a CBP in H and Fe I 617.3 nm from the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) in coordination with the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). This work presents the first high-resolution observation of spicules imaged in H. The spicules were automatically detected using advanced image processing techniques, which were applied to the Dopplergrams derived from H. Here we report…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
