Abstract

Observations with orbiting coronagraphs have illuminated the role of coronal mass ejections in solar activity, and raised a number of questions concerning their origin, the nature of the forces driving the coronal material, and their signature in interplanetary space. Current models of the ejection process - including propagation of loops as a result of azimuthal field gradients, ring currents or a build-up of magnetic pressure from below - are summarized, as are magnetohydrodynamic codes intended to stimulate transient conditions. Metric radio observations, can, in principle, distinguish the relative role of the magnetic field in the ejection process; observations to date are surveyed. It is concluded that at present, no compelling evidence is available to distinguish between transient driving mechanisms, but future observations of the corona and interplanetary medium may resolve the present ambiguity.

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