Shock-induced magnetic reconnection driving Ellerman bomb emission and a spicule
Mats Ola Sand, Quentin Noraz, Guillaume Aulanier, Juan Mart\'inez-Sykora, Mats Carlsson, Luc Rouppe van der Voort

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that shock-induced magnetic reconnection in the solar atmosphere can trigger Ellerman bombs and drive type II spicules, providing a physical mechanism linking these phenomena through detailed radiative magnetohydrodynamic simulations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new mechanism where shocks create current sheets that reconnect, launching spicules and producing Ellerman bombs, advancing understanding of their physical connection.
Findings
Shock-induced current sheets trigger EBs and spicules.
Reconnection outflows launch type II spicules.
EBs trace shock and reconnection dynamics at spicule footpoints.
Abstract
The mechanism that forms dynamic type II spicules has remained elusive for many years. Their dynamical behaviour has long been linked to magnetic reconnection, yet no conclusive evidence has been provided. However, one recent observational study found signs of reconnection, as traced by Ellerman bombs (EBs), at the footpoints of many spicules. The triggering of EBs is generally linked to reconnection due to flux emergence and convective motions in the photosphere. We aim to explore whether we can connect EBs to type II spicules, and to what extent we can use EBs as an observational proxy to probe reconnection in this dynamic. We also aim to provide further insight into the mechanisms that trigger EBs. We used a simulation run with the radiative magnetohydrodynamics code Bifrost to track spicules and study the physical processes behind their formation. To detect EBs and classify the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Lightning and Electromagnetic Phenomena
