Evidence from the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer for axial filament rotation before a large flare

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Abstract

In this article, we present observations made with the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer on-board the Hinode solar satellite, of an active region filament in the Hell emission line at 256.32 Å The host active region AR 10930 produces an X-class flare during these observations. We measure Doppler shifts with apparent velocities of up to 20km s-1, which are antisymmetric about the filament length and occur several minutes before the flare's impulsive phase. This is indicative of a rotation of the filament, which is in turn consistent with expansion of a twisted flux rope due to the MHD helical kink instability. This is the first time that such an observation has been possible in this transition-region line, and we note that the signature observed occurs before the first indications of pre-flare activity in the GOES solar soft X-ray flux, suggesting that the filament begins to destabilise in tandem with a reorganization of the local magnetic field. We suggest that this expansion is triggered by the decrease of magnetic tension around, and/or total pressure above, the filament. © 2009. Astronomocal Society of Japan.

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Williams, D. R., Harra, L. K., Brooks, D. H., Imada, S., & Hansteen, V. H. (2009). Evidence from the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer for axial filament rotation before a large flare. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 61(3), 493–497. https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/61.3.493

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