Analysis of the evolution of a multi-ribbon flare and failed filament eruption
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2022-01-01Autor
Cremades, Hebe
Mandrini, Cristina
Chandra, Ramesh
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How filaments form and erupt are topics about which solar researchers have wondered for
more than a century and they are still open to debate. We present observations of a filament formation, its failed eruption, and the associated flare (SOL2019-05-09T05:51) that
occurred in active region (AR) 12740 using data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory
(SDO), the Solar-Terrestrial Relations Observatory A (STEREO-A), the Interface Region
Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) and the Learmonth Solar Observatory (LSO) of the National
Solar Observatory/Global Oscillation Network Group (NSO/GONG). AR 12740 was a decaying region formed by a very disperse following polarity and a strong leading spot, surrounded by a highly dynamic zone where moving magnetic features (MMFs) were seen
constantly diverging from the spot. Our analysis indicates that the filament was formed by
the convergence of fibrils at a location where magnetic flux cancellation was observed. Furthermore, we conclude that its destabilisation was also related to flux cancellation associated
with the constant shuffling of the MMFs. A two-ribbon flare occurred associated with the
filament eruption; however, because the large-scale magnetic configuration of the AR was
quadrupolar, two additional flare ribbons developed far from the two main ones. We model
the magnetic configuration of the AR using a force-free field approach at the AR scale size.
This local model is complemented by a global potential-field source-surface one. Based on
the local model, we propose a scenario in which the filament failed eruption and the flare
are due to two reconnection processes, one occurring below the erupting filament, leading to
the two-ribbon flare, and another one above it between the filament flux-rope configuration
and the large-scale closed loops. Our computation of the reconnected magnetic flux added
to the erupting flux rope, compared to that of the large-scale field overlying it, allows us to
conclude that the latter was large enough to prevent the filament eruption. A similar conjecture can be drawn from the computation of the magnetic tension derived from the global
field model.
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