A&A 452, L11-L14 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:200600024
Letter
Macrospicules and blinkers as seen in Shutterless EIT 304 Å
M. S. Madjarska1, J. G. Doyle2, J.-F. Hochedez1 and A. Theissen11 Royal Observatory of Belgium, 3 Circular Avenue, 1180 Brussels, Belgium
e-mail: mariama@oma.be
2 Armagh Observatory, College Hill, Armagh BT61 9DG, N. Ireland
(Received 20 December 2005 / Accepted 20 April 2006)
Abstract
Aims.Small-scale transient phenomena in the solar atmosphere are believed to play a
crucial role in the coronal heating and solar wind generation. This study aims
at providing new observational evidence on blinkers and macrospicules appearance
in imager data and in doing so, establish the long disputed relationship between these
phenomena.
Methods.We analyse unique high-cadence images in the transition region He II 304 Å line
obtained in a shutterless mode of the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope on
board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory.
The data have a cadence of approximately 68 s and a pixel size of 2.62 arcsec.
The events are identified through an automatic brightenings identification
procedure. Features showing a jet-like structure seen in projection on the disk
were selected and their light-curve further analysed.
Results.The temporal evolution of the intensity in three
events is shown, two of them seen on-disk as jet-like features and one
above the limb. The flux increase, size and duration derived from the
light-curve of the on-disk events show an identity with the blinker phenomenon.
Conclusions.The light curves of these events suggest that the off-limb
and on-disk features are in fact one and the same phenomenon and therefore
that some blinkers are the on-disk counterparts of macrospicules.
Key words: Sun: atmosphere -- Sun: transition region -- methods: observational -- methods: data analysis
© ESO 2006
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