Abstract

We have examined the preflare activity of an M1.2 flare that occurred in NOAA active region 8440 on 1999 January 16, using images from the Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXT) on board Yohkoh, 1600 A UV images from the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE), X-ray flux data from the GOES satellite, and magnetograms from Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). During the preflare phase, we note a weak GOES X-ray flux enhancement just 4 minutes before the main flare begins. The SXT images show that this enhancement occurs at one footpoint of a soft X-ray loop bundle, which exactly coincides with the kernel of the major flare. The series of TRACE images provides the following pieces of evidence for small-scale magnetic reconnections associated with the preflare activity. (1) A small-scale UV sigmoid is seen at the X-ray loop footpoint before the preflare activity, and it is located along the polarity inversion line. (2) The brightest among the UV brightenings is exactly coincident and cospatial with the soft X-ray brightening observed by the Yohkoh SXT and GOES. (3) There were several interactions and brightenings among small UV loops. After these brightenings, the connectivity of the UV loops was apparently changed. As a result, a large rising loop structure was formed, with a maximum rising speed of about 40 km s−1. (4) The main flare occurred in this structure. In the aspects of the overall configuration and morphological change of UV loops, the preflare activity is quite consistent with the tether-cutting model with a single-bipole magnetic explosion. We suggest that the preflare activity and the main flare in this event not only have similar physical mechanisms, but also have a causal relation.

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