Published August 2023 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Partially Erupted Prominence Material as a Diagnostic of Coronal Mass Ejection Trajectory

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Goddard Space Flight Center
  • 3. ROR icon Catholic University of America
  • 4. ROR icon Predictive Science (United States)

Abstract

Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are energetic releases of large‐scale magnetic structures from the Sun. CMEs can have impacts on spacecraft and at Earth. This trajectory is typically assumed to be radial, but often the CME moves outward with some spatial offset from the source region where the eruption initially occurred. A CME is frequently accompanied by a prominence eruption, a movement of cool, dense material up into the corona that can be ejected or fall back down. We investigate eruptions in which some portion of the prominence material falls back to the Sun along field lines which have reconfigured in the eruption, rather than draining back to the source or escaping with the CME. Using a method called persistence mapping, 304 Å images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), and coronagraph images from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, we measure and compare the offsets in latitude of 20 CMEs and their respective prominences with respect to the source region. The 20 events were chosen to sample over the first 10 years of the SDO mission. We find that the offsets are correlated. We find no difference between eruptions offset toward the equator or the poles, suggesting that the offset is a result of local changes in the eruptive field, rather than of the Sun's global magnetic field structure. These findings help us contextualize individual eruptions and highlight changes in the local magnetic field associated with the prominence eruption.

Copyright and License

© 2023. The Authors. Space Weather published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgement

Thank you to C. Richard DeVore for helpful conversations and advice.

Funding

BHA's effort was funded by the Solar Dynamics Observatory mission. BJT's effort was provided through the NASA Internal Science Funding Model (ISFM) project “Magnetic Energy Buildup and Explosive Release in the Solar Atmosphere.” EIM's research during the development of this paper was supported by an appointment to the NASA Postdoctoral Program at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, administered by Universities Space Research Association under contract with NASA.

Data Availability

Our measurements are included in Table 2. As part of this work, we developed an implementation of the persistence mapping and time convolution mapping algorithms in Python, Hovis-Afflerbach (2023).

Files

Space Weather - 2023 - Hovis‐Afflerbach - Partially Erupted Prominence Material as a Diagnostic of Coronal Mass Ejection.pdf

Additional details

Funding

National Aeronautics and Space Administration
NASA Postdoctoral Program
Goddard Space Flight Center

Dates

Available
2023-07-31
Issue Online
Accepted
2023-06-13
Manuscript Accepted

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Publication Status
Published