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Study of Ribbon Separation of a Flare Associated with a Quiescent Filament Eruption

130

Citations

18

References

2003

Year

Abstract

In this paper, we present a detailed study of a two-ribbon flare in the plage region observed by Kanzelhohe Solar Observatory (KSO), which is one of the stations in our global H network. We select this event due to its very clear filament eruption, two-ribbon separation, and association with a fast coronal mass ejection (CME). We study the separation between the two ribbons seen in H as a function of time and find that the separation motion consisted of a fast stage of rapid motion at a speed of about 15 km s 1 in the first 20 minutes and a slow stage with a separation speed of about 1 km s 1 lasting for 2 hr. We then estimate the rate of the magnetic reconnection in the corona, as represented by the electric fields Ec in the reconnecting current sheet, by measuring the ribbon motion speed and the magnetic fields obtained from MDI. We find that there were two stages as well in evolution of the electric fields: Ec 1Vcm1 averaged over 20 minutes in the early stage, followed by Ec 0:1 Vcm1 in the subsequent 2 hr. The two stages of the ribbon motion and electric fields coincide with the impulsive and decaying phases of the flare, respectively, yielding clear evidence that the impulsive flare energy release is governed by the fast magnetic reconnection in the corona. We also measure the projected heights of the erupting filament from KSO H and SOHO/EIT images. The filament started to rise 20 minutes before the flare. After the flare onset, it was accelerated quickly at a rate of 300 m

References

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