Measuring and modeling the rate of separator reconnection between an emerging and existing active region

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL(2019)

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摘要
Magnetic reconnection occurs when new flux emerges into the corona and becomes incorporated into the existing coronal field. A new active region (AR) emerging in the vicinity of an existing AR provides a convenient laboratory in which reconnection of this kind can be quantified. We use high time-cadence 171 angstrom data from Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/AIA, focused on new/old active region pair 11147/11149, to quantify reconnection. We identify new loops as brightenings within a strip of pixels between the regions. This strategy is premised on the assumption that the energy responsible for brightening a loop originates in magnetic reconnection. We catalog 301 loops observed in the 48 hr time period beginning with the emergence of AR 11149. The rate at which these loops appear between the two ARs is used to calculate the reconnection rate between them. We then fit these loops with magnetic field, solving for each loop's field strength, geometry, and twist (via its proxy, coronal alpha). We find the rate of newly brightened flux overestimates the flux that could be undergoing reconnection. This excess can be explained by our finding that the interconnecting region is not at its lowest energy (constant-alpha) state; the extrapolations exhibit loop-to-loop variation in alpha. This flux overestimate may result from the slow emergence of AR 11149, which allows time for Taylor relaxation internal to the domain of the reconnected flux to bring the a distribution toward a single value, providing another mechanism for brightening loops after they are first created.
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