The Automatic Identification and Tracking of Coronal Flux Ropes -- Part I: Footpoints and Fluxes
Andreas Wagner, Emilia K. J. Kilpua, Ranadeep Sarkar, Daniel J. Price,, Anshu Kumari, Farhad Daei, Jens Pomoell, Stefaan Poedts

TL;DR
This paper presents an algorithm for tracking early-stage erupting solar flux ropes, analyzing their footpoint movement and magnetic flux evolution through data-driven simulations and observational data, enhancing understanding of eruption mechanisms.
Contribution
The study introduces an efficient algorithm for extracting and analyzing the early dynamics of erupting solar flux ropes from simulation and observational data.
Findings
Flux rope footpoints recede during eruption in both models.
Ultraviolet brightenings and dimmings match model dynamics.
Toroidal magnetic flux first rises then decreases during eruption.
Abstract
Investigating the early-stage evolution of an erupting flux rope from the Sun is important to understand the mechanisms of how it looses its stability and its space weather impacts. Our aim is to develop an efficient scheme for tracking the early dynamics of erupting solar flux ropes and use the algorithm to analyse its early-stage properties. The algorithm is tested on a data-driven simulation of an eruption that took place in active region AR12473. We investigate the modelled flux rope's footpoint movement and magnetic flux evolution and compare with observational data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly in the 211 and 1600 channels. To carry out our analysis, we use the time-dependent data-driven magnetofrictional model (TMFM). We also perform another modelling run, where we stop the driving of the TMFM midway through…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
