Recovery of coronal dimmings
Giulia M. Ronca, Galina Chikunova, Karin Dissauer, Tatiana, Podladchikova, and Astrid M. Veronig

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term recovery of coronal dimmings after CMEs using new analysis methods, revealing different recovery timescales for core and secondary regions and identifying loop expansion as a key recovery mechanism.
Contribution
The paper introduces two novel approaches for analyzing coronal dimming recovery, enabling detailed tracking of brightness and area changes over time in different regions.
Findings
Most dimmings recover within 24 hours post-eruption.
Core dimmings may not fully recover within three days.
Loop expansion is identified as a primary recovery mechanism.
Abstract
Coronal dimmings are regions of reduced emission in the lower corona, observed after coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and representing their footprints. In order to investigate the long-term evolution of coronal dimming and its recovery, we propose two approaches that focus on both the global and the local evolution of dimming regions: the fixed mask approach and the pixel boxes approach. We present four case studies (September 6, 2011; March 7, 2012; June 14, 2012; and March 8, 2019) in which a coronal dimming is associated with a flare/CME eruption. We identified the dimming region by image segmentation, then restricted the analysis to a specific portion of the dimming and tracked the time evolution of the dimming brightness and area. In addition, we studied the behavior of small subregions inside the dimming area, of about 3x3 pixels, to compare the recovery in different regions of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSilkworms and Sericulture Research
