Abstract

Context. We report on the third part of a series of studies on eruptions associated with small-scale loop complexes named coronal bright points (CBPs). Aims. A single case study of a CBP in an equatorial coronal hole with an exceptionally large size is investigated to expand on our understanding of the formation of mini-filaments, their destabilisation, and the origin of the eruption triggering the formation of jet-like features recorded in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and X-ray emission. We aim to explore the nature of the so-called micro-flares in CBPs associated with jets in coronal holes and mini coronal mass ejections in the quiet Sun. Methods. Co-observations from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and Helioseismic Magnetic Imager (HMI) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory as well as GONG Hα images are used together with a non-linear force free field (NLFFF) relaxation approach, where the latter is based on a time series of HMI line-of-sight magnetograms. Results. A mini-filament (MF) that formed beneath the CBP arcade about 3−4 h before the eruption is seen in the Hα and EUV AIA images to lift up and erupt triggering the formation of an X-ray jet. No significant photospheric magnetic flux concentration displacement (convergence) is observed and neither is magnetic flux cancellation between the two main magnetic polarities forming the CBP in the time period leading to MF lift-off. The CBP micro-flare is associated with three flare kernels that formed shortly after the MF lift-off. No observational signature is found for magnetic reconnection beneath the erupting MF. The applied NLFFF modelling successfully reproduces both the CBP loop complex as well as the magnetic flux rope that hosts the MF during the build-up to the eruption. Conclusions. The applied NLFFF modelling is able to clearly show that an initial potential field can be evolved into a non-potential magnetic field configuration that contains free magnetic energy in the region that observationally hosts the eruption. The comparison of the magnetic field structure shows that the magnetic NLFFF model contains many of the features that can explain the different observational signatures found in the evolution and eruption of the CBP. In the future, it may eventually indicate the location of destabilisation that results in the eruptions of flux ropes.

Highlights

  • Coronal bright points (CBPs) have been intensively studied for almost five decades

  • Inouye Solar Telescope and the European Solar Telescope, along with our ever improving theoretical modelling, we have a unique opportunity to advance our knowledge on these phenomena

  • We present a case study of an eruption from a CBP located in an equatorial hole, which is a continuation of our investigation of eruptions from CBPs

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Summary

Introduction

Coronal bright points (CBPs) have been intensively studied for almost five decades. They represent a set of small-scale coronal loops that connect magnetic flux concentrations of an opposite polarity. CBPs are found to be uniformly distributed in the solar corona of the quiet Sun, coronal holes, and in the vicinity of active regions. This paper is the third of a series of studies that investigate the eruptive behaviour of CBPs. Mou et al (2018, hereafter Paper I) explored the morphological and dynamical evolution of eruptions associated with CBPs in the context of their full lifetime evolution. The follow-up study by Galsgaard et al (2019, hereafter Paper II)

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