Filament eruption by multiple reconnections
Y. Liu, G. P. Ruan, B. Schmieder, J. H. Guo, Y. Chen, R. S. Zheng, J., T. Su, and B. Wang

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex magnetic reconnection processes triggering a solar filament eruption, combining multiwavelength observations with advanced magnetic topology and MHD modeling to reveal multiple reconnections and their role in the eruption.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the magnetic reconnection mechanisms involved in filament eruptions using combined observational and modeling approaches, highlighting multiple reconnections at different scales.
Findings
Magnetic reconnection occurs in a fan-spine configuration leading to a circular flare ribbon.
The filament interacts with open magnetic field lines, causing deflection and eruption.
Multiple reconnections at small and large scales drive the filament eruption.
Abstract
Filament eruption is a common phenomenon in solar activity, but the triggering mechanism is not well understood. We focus our study on a filament eruption located in a complex nest of three active regions close to a coronal hole. The filament eruption is observed at multiple wavelengths: by the GONG, the STEREO, the SUTRI, and the AIA and Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the SDO. Thanks to high temporal-resolution observations, we were able to analyze the evolution of the fine structure of the filament in detail. The filament changes direction during the eruption, which is followed by a halo coronal mass ejection detected by the LASCO on board the SOHO. A Type III radio burst was also registered at the time of the eruption. To investigate the process of the eruption, we analyzed the magnetic topology of the filament region adopting a nonlinear force-free-field (NLFFF)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Molecular Physics · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics
