Magnetic structure of coronal dark halos
J. D. N\"olke, S. K. Solanki, J. Hirzberger, H. Peter, L. P. Chitta, K. H. Glassmeier, D. Calchetti, G. Valori

TL;DR
This study investigates the magnetic and emission properties of coronal dark halos around active regions, revealing temperature-dependent magnetic flux and coronal emission patterns that inform understanding of coronal heating mechanisms.
Contribution
It combines Solar Orbiter data to analyze magnetic flux and coronal emission in dark halos, highlighting temperature-dependent magnetic and emission structures near active regions.
Findings
Dark halos have magnetic flux densities similar to the quiet Sun but decrease with distance from the active region.
Coronal emission below 1 MK is significantly lower than the quiet Sun and independent of distance.
Hotter emission (>1.6 MK) exceeds quiet Sun levels and declines outward, with different loop structures at various temperatures.
Abstract
At low coronal temperatures around or below 1 MK distinct areas in the surroundings of active regions (AR) show emission at a level significantly below the emission coming from the quiet Sun (QS). These areas are referred to as dark halos, dark canopies, or dark moats. To better understand the nature of dark halos we study the connection between the photospheric magnetic field and coronal emission at different temperatures. Combining Solar Orbiter data from the high-resolution Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager (SO/PHI) and Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instruments allows us to identify these areas that are dark in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) in the immediate vicinity of an AR. We probe both the photospheric magnetic field as well as the coronal intensities as a function of distance to the AR NOAA 12893. The dark halo has an unsigned magnetic flux density similar to the QS, but…
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