Sungrazer comets as analogs of star-planet magnetic interactions
L-S. Guit\'e, A. Strugarek, A. J. Finley, S. Parenti, V. R\'eville, A. Paul, A. S. Brun, and J. de Carpentier

TL;DR
This study investigates whether sungrazing comet Lovejoy could trigger solar activity through magnetic interactions, using modeling and observations to assess the energy transfer and its potential to cause solar flares.
Contribution
The paper quantifies the magnetic interaction energetics of sungrazing comets with the Sun and evaluates their potential to trigger solar phenomena, a novel investigation in this context.
Findings
Comet Lovejoy's magnetic interaction power is insufficient to cause observed brightening.
The brightening event's radiative power is about 10^17 W, exceeding the estimated SPMI power.
Comets may perturb magnetic structures and potentially trigger solar flares.
Abstract
Star-planet magnetic interactions (SPMIs) can transfer energy from an exoplanet to its host star via Alfv\'en waves when the planet orbits within a sub-Alfv\'enic stellar wind. Similar conditions were encountered by the sungrazing comet Lovejoy as it passed through the solar corona in December 2011. The possibility that comets could trigger solar activity via magnetic interactions has never been investigated. The aim of this paper is to quantify the energetics of such interaction and to assess if enough energy could be deposited to either form a hotspot or trigger eruptions on the Sun. We used the magnetohydrodynamic WindPredict-AW model to reconstruct the coronal magnetic field and solar wind conditions along the comet's orbit, and determined the magnetic footpoints that connected the comet to the solar surface. By estimating the travel time of hypothetical Alfv\'en waves, we…
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