Published August 9, 2017 | Version v1
Presentation Open

A Comparison of Coronal Dimming Behavior Between XRT and AIA Data

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Western Kentucky University

Contributors

  • 1. Harvard-Smithsonian Center
  • 2. Harvard-Smi

Description

A coronal dimming is an event that takes place in the sun’s atmosphere, in which a patch of bright plasma seemingly disappears leaving a dark spot. These events are often associated with other solar phenomena such as flares and coronal mass ejections. Over the lifetimes of the SDO/AIA and Hinode/XRT telescopes many of these dimmings have been observed, however very few have been studied using XRT data. For this project one event was selected, and the goal was to measure how the area of the dimming region behaved over time in relation to other events in the area. In doing this, a new objective method for determining a threshold between the dimming region and the surrounding area was developed which can now be used to analyze the area of almost any dimming region. After comparing the region’s behavior over multiple wavelengths, our results support the common theory that these dimmings are caused by an evacuation of plasma due to opening magnetic field lines, rather than a sudden temperature change.

Notes

This work supported by the NSF-REU solar physics program at SAO, grant number AGS-1560313.

Files

AIA304DimmingContours1.mp4

Files (840.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:347fefa6c801985d7e958cc6b8a91790
287.3 MB Download
md5:9f7c5992907cf2e586079ed10c4eee42
19.5 MB Preview Download
md5:a426b2cbd3cd064d491412dc7f54e5e5
5.7 MB Download
md5:f242c66bdb49402768e09950bd636c29
3.6 MB Download
md5:90117a0146533dc0d29cbe73b473300b
180.8 MB Download
md5:e86db5352b9eaef16951027b56333800
14.4 MB Preview Download
md5:4482ca93efdf60f1fc2806e8fdd58606
329.2 MB Download