Abstract
The EUV Imaging Telescope (EIT), Large Angle Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO), and Ultraviolet Coronagraph Spectrometer (UVCS) instruments aboard the SOHO satellite observed a prominence eruption (coronal mass ejection) on 1997 December 12. Ejected plasma moved at about 130 km s~1 in the plane of the sky and showed Doppler shifts between [350 and ]30 km s~1. The eruption appeared as a strongly curved arch in EIT images low in the corona. Emission in ions ranging from Si III to O VI in the UVCS spectra indicates a temperature range between 104.5 and 105.5 K. The morphology of the bright emission regions seen by all three instruments suggests several strands of a helical structure of moderate pitch angle. A reasonable Ðt to the spatial structure and the velocity evolution measured by UVCS is provided by a left-handed helix untwisting at a rate of about 9 ] 10~4 radians s~1.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ciaravella, A., Raymond, J. C., Thompson, B. J., van Ballegooijen, A., Strachan, L., Li, J., … Noci, G. (2000). Solar and Heliospheric Observatory Observations of a Helical Coronal Mass Ejection. The Astrophysical Journal, 529(1), 575–591. https://doi.org/10.1086/308260
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