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Observation of a large-scale filament eruption initiated by two small-scale erupting filaments pushing out from below

Authors :
Song, Yongliang
Su, Jiangtao
Zhang, Qingmin
Zhang, Mei
Deng, Yuanyong
Bai, Xianyong
Liu, Suo
Yang, Xiao
Chen, Jie
Xu, Haiqing
Ji, Kaifan
Hu, Ziyao
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Filament eruptions often result in flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Most studies attribute the filament eruptions to their instabilities or magnetic reconnection. In this study, we report a unique observation of a filament eruption whose initiation process has not been reported before. This large-scale filament, with a length of about 360 Mm crossing an active region, is forced to erupted by two small-scale erupting filaments pushing out from below. This process of multi-filament eruption results in an M6.4 flare in the active region NOAA 13229 on 25th February 2023. The whole process can be divided into three stages: the eruptions of two active-region filaments F1 and F2; the interactions between the erupting F1, F2, and the large-scale filament F3; and the eruption of F3. Though this multi-filament eruption occurs near the northwest limb of the solar disk, it produces a strong halo CME that causes a significant geomagnetic disturbance. Our observations present a new filament eruption mechanism, in which the initial kinetic energy of the eruption is obtained from and transported to by other erupting structures. This event provides us a unique insight into the dynamics of multi-filament eruptions and their corresponding effects on the interplanetary space.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Solar Physics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.13311
Document Type :
Working Paper