4.7 Article

On the formation of filament channels

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 666, Issue 2, Pages 1284-1295

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/520623

Keywords

Sun : chromosphere; Sun : filaments; Sun : magnetic fields; Sun : photosphere; Sun : prominences; Sun : UV radiation

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From the H alpha archive of the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) we have selected three examples showing fibril structures that change their orientation, over 1 or 2 days, from nearly perpendicular to nearly parallel to the polarity inversion line (PIL). In one case, the filament channel forms within a single decaying bipole; in the other two cases, it forms along the boundary between an active region and its surroundings. Comparing the H alpha filtergrams with magnetograms from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI), we find that the fibrils become aligned with the PIL as supergranular convection brings opposite-polarity magnetic flux together; shearing motions along the PIL, when present, act mainly to accelerate the rate of diffusive annihilation. We conclude that the reorientation of the fibrils is due to the cancellation and submergence of the transverse field component (B-perpendicular to), leaving behind the preexisting axial field component (B-parallel to). The latter may have been generated by photospheric differential rotation over longer timescales, or else was already present when the flux emerged. The filament channel forms slowly if B-parallel to/B-perpendicular to is initially small, as along the internal neutral line of a newly emerged bipole, but may appear within hours if this ratio is initially substantial, as where the dipole-like loops of an active region curve around its periphery. In all of our examples, filaments form within a day or so after the fibrils become aligned with the PIL, while barbs appear at a later stage, as flux elements continue to diffuse across the PIL and cancel with the majority-polarity flux on the other side.

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