Homologous compact major blowout-eruption solar flares and their production of broad CMEs
Source
arXiv
ISSN
2331-8422
Date Issued
2022-03-01
Author(s)
Sahu, Suraj
Joshi, Bhuwan
Sterling, Alphonse C.
Mitra, Prabir K.
Moore, Ronald L.
Abstract
We analyze the formation mechanism of three homologous broad coronal mass ejections (CMEs) resulting from a series of solar blowout-eruption flares with successively increasing intensities (M2.0, M2.6, and X1.0). The flares originated from active region NOAA 12017 during 2014 March 28-29 within an interval of approximately 24 hr. Coronal magnetic field modeling based on nonlinear-force-free-field extrapolation helps to identify low-lying closed bipolar loops within the flaring region enclosing magnetic flux ropes. We obtain a double flux rope system under closed bipolar fields for the all the events. The sequential eruption of the flux ropes led to homologous flares, each followed by a CME. Each of the three CMEs formed from the eruptions gradually attain a large angular width, after expanding from the compact eruption-source site. We find these eruptions and CMEs to be consistent with the 'magnetic-arch-blowout' scenario: each compact-flare blowout eruption was seated in one foot of a far-reaching magnetic arch, exploded up the encasing leg of the arch, and blew out the arch to make a broad CME.
Subjects
Solar flares
Coronal mass ejections
Magnetic-arch-blowout
Stellar astrophysics
Compact eruption-source
