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A&A 483, 599-608 (2008)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20078311
Analysis and interpretation of a fast limb CME with eruptive prominence, C-flare, and EUV dimming
S. Koutchmy1, V. Slemzin2, B. Filippov3, J.-C. Noens4, D. Romeuf5, and L. Golub61 Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris, CNRS and Univ. P. & M. Curie, 98bis boulevard Arago, 75014 Paris, France
e-mail: koutchmy@iap.fr
2 P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute, Leninsky pr. 53, Moscow 119991, Russia
e-mail: slem@mail1.lebedev.ru
3 Pushkov Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere and Radio Wave Propagation, Russian Academy of Sciences (IZMIRAN), Troitsk Moscow Region, 142190, Russia
e-mail: bfilip@izmiran.troitsk.ru
4 OMP and Pic du Midi Observatory, France
e-mail: noens@ast.obs-mip.fr
5 C.R.I. Claude Bernard Lyon I University, O.A.-Fiducial, France
e-mail: David.Romeuf@recherche.univ-lyon1.fr
6 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street MS58, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
e-mail: golub@cfa.harvard.edu
(Received 18 July 2007 / Accepted 7 December 2007)
Abstract
Aims. Coronal mass ejections or CMEs are large dynamical solar-corona events.
The mass balance and kinematics of a fast limb CME, including its
prominence progenitor and the associated flare, will be compared
with computed magnetic structures to look for their origin and
effect.
Methods. Multi-wavelength ground-based and spaceborne observations are used to study
a fast W-limb CME event of December 2, 2003, taking into account
both on and off disk observations. Its erupting prominence is
measured at high cadence with the Pic du Midi full H
line-flux imaging coronagraph. EUV images from SOHO/EIT and
CORONAS-F/SPIRIT space instruments are processed including
difference imaging. SOHO/LASCO images are used to study the mass
excess and motions. Computed coronal structures from extrapolated
surface magnetic fields are compared to observations.
Results. A fast bright expanding coronal loop is identified in the region recorded
slightly later by GOES as a C7.2 flare, followed by a brightening and an
acceleration phase of the erupting material with both cool and hot components.
The total coronal radiative flux dropped by ~7% in the 19.5 nm channel and
by 4% in the 17.5 nm channel, revealing a large dimming effect at and above the limb
over a 2 h interval. The typical 3-part structure observed 1 h later
by the Lasco C2 and C3 coronagraphs shows a core shaped similarly
to the eruptive filament/prominence. The total measured mass of the escaping CME
(~1.5
1016 g from C2 LASCO observations) definitely exceeds the estimated
mass of the escaping cool prominence material although assumptions made to
analyze the H
erupting prominence, as well as the
corresponding EUV darkening of the filament observed several days before, made
this evaluation uncertain by a factor of 2. This mass budget suggests that the event
is not confined to the eruption region alone. From the current free extrapolation
we discuss the shape of the magnetic neutral surface and a possible
scenario leading to an instability, including the small scale dynamics inside and
around the filament.
Key words: Sun: activity -- Sun: filaments -- Sun: prominences -- Sun: coronal mass ejections (CMEs) -- Sun: flares
© ESO 2008
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