Title: The May 1997 and May 1998 MURI events
1The May 1997 and May 1998 MURI events
- George H. Fisher
- UC Berkeley
2May 12 1997
- Classic 2-ribbon flare occurring in NOAA AR 8038
at 0445 UT - Halo CME seen 1-2 hours later
- (partial) filament eruption
- Global solar magnetic configuration is quite
simple - Magnetic data poor temporal coverage, coarse
spatial resolution - In MURI teams Yang Liu (Stanford) is doing most
of the work on this event
3Global magnetic configuration around May 12, 1997
(pfss model)
- Overall global magnetic configuration is simple
just one active region on the disk at the time of
the flare/CME.
4Magnetic Evolution of AR 8038 over 3 days
- Active region appears to be mature and starting
to decay, with apparent flux cancellation
5May 12, 1997 Evolution seen in H?
- 2-ribbon flare
- Partial filament disappearance
- X-ray importance C-class
6May 12 1997 X-ray evolution
- Before flare sigmoid shaped arcade
- Flare decay classic candle-flame shaped arcade
7May 12, 1997 Double dimming, EIT wave
- Double-dimming occurs after flare, roughly at
ends of 2-ribbon flare arcades.
8May 12 1997 LASCO C2 images
- Wimpy halo event seen 2 hours after the
2-ribbon flare
9Interplanetary Data for the May 12 1997 event
10May 1, 1998
- Active region 8210 produced a long series of
flares and CMEs as it rotated across the disk.
Our focus is several small flares / CMEs
occurring on May 1, 1998 because of very high
quality vector magnetic field observations taken
that day. - Overall solar configuration was not so simple
8210 appears connected to an active region across
the equator via trans-equatorial loops
11Global magnetic configuration around May 1, 1998
(pfss model)
- AR 8210 appears to be magnetically connected to a
northern hemisphere AR and is also adjacent to a
low-latitude coronal hole
1224 hours of high cadence MDI evolution of AR
8210 on May 1 1998
- Flux emergence above and to right of sunspot
- Clockwise rotation of sunspot
- Flow of positive polarity on left of spot toward
lower right
13Non-constant ? force-free field fit to AR 8210
(Regnier)
- Uses vector magnetogram data from IVM instrument
on Haleakala data averaged for a 15 minute
cadence
14Models of the emission from AR 8210 (Loraine
Lundquist)
- Start from Regniers FFF solution
- Assume a heating function Q B/L on each field
line - Solve energy balance equation
- Compute emissivity and make false image
15H? evolution of AR8210 on May 1, 1998
- There are several filaments associated with this
active region, which appear to be constantly
evolving - There appears to be a 2-ribbon flare around 2340
UT
16X-ray evolution of AR 8210 on May 1, 1998
- Note simultaneous flickering of the two active
regions, plus hint of transequatorial loops - Note the repeated activation of the arcade of
loops on the LHS of the active region
17EIT evolution of AR 8210 on May 1, 1998
- Note repeated brightenings along LHS of active
region adjacent to coronal hole - This evolution described by Sterling Moore in
their paper on EIT crinkles as repeated
reconnection of closed field lines with open
field lines in the hole
18Interplanetary Data for May 1, 1998