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Relative field line helicity of a large eruptive solar active region

K. Moraitis, S. Patsourakos, A. Nindos

2021Astronomy and Astrophysics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Context. Magnetic helicity is a physical quantity of great importance in the study of astrophysical and natural plasmas. Although a density for helicity cannot be defined, a good proxy for this quantity is field line helicity. The appropriate quantity for use in solar conditions is relative field line helicity (RFLH). Aims. This work aims to study in detail the behaviour of RFLH, for the first time, in a solar active region (AR). Methods. The target AR is the large, eruptive AR 11158. In order to compute RFLH and all other quantities of interest, we used a non-linear force-free reconstruction of the AR coronal magnetic field of excellent quality. Results. We find that the photospheric morphology of RFLH is very different than that of the magnetic field or electrical current, and this morphology is not sensitive to the chosen gauge in the computation of RFLH. The value of helicity experiences a large decrease, that is ∼25% of its pre-flare value, during an X-class flare of the AR; this change is also depicted in the photospheric morphology of RFLH. Moreover, the area of this change coincides with the area that encompasses the flux rope, which is the magnetic structure that later erupted. Conclusions. The use of RFLH can provide important information about the value and location of the magnetic helicity expelled from the solar atmosphere during eruptive events.

Topics & Concepts

HelicityPhysicsMagnetic helicitySolar flareSolar prominenceMagnetic fieldMagnetic fluxAstrophysicsCoronal loopContext (archaeology)Computational physicsCoronal mass ejectionSolar windMagnetohydrodynamicsGeologyParticle physicsQuantum mechanicsPaleontologySolar and Space Plasma DynamicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsAstro and Planetary Science
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