Solar Ultraviolet Bursts

The term “ultraviolet (UV) burst” is introduced to describe small, intense, transient brightenings in ultraviolet images of solar active regions. We inventorize their properties and provide a definition based on image sequences in transition-region lines. Coronal signatures are rare, and most bursts...

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Hauptverfasser: Young, P.R, Tian, H, Peter, H, Rutten, R.J, Nelson, C.J, Huang, Z, Schmieder, B, Vissers, G.J.M, Toriumi, S, van der Voort, L.H.M.R, Madjarska, M.S, Danilovic, S, Berlicki, A, Chitta, L.P, Cheung, M.C.M, Madsen, C, Reardon, K.P, Katsukawa, Y, Heinzel, P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The term “ultraviolet (UV) burst” is introduced to describe small, intense, transient brightenings in ultraviolet images of solar active regions. We inventorize their properties and provide a definition based on image sequences in transition-region lines. Coronal signatures are rare, and most bursts are associated with small-scale, canceling opposite-polarity fields in the photosphere that occur in emerging flux regions, moving magnetic features in sunspot moats, and sunspot light bridges. We also compare UV bursts with similar transition-region phenomena found previously in solar ultraviolet spectrometry and with similar phenomena at optical wavelengths, in particular Ellerman bombs. Akin to the latter, UV bursts are probably small-scale magnetic reconnection events occurring in the low atmosphere, at photospheric and/or chromospheric heights. Their intense emission in lines with optically thin formation gives unique diagnostic opportunities for studying the physics of magnetic reconnection in the low solar atmosphere. This paper is a review report from an International Space Science Institute team that met in 2016–2017.
DOI:10.1007/s11214-018-0551-0