{ "id": "1902.00922", "version": "v1", "published": "2019-02-03T16:40:26.000Z", "updated": "2019-02-03T16:40:26.000Z", "title": "Multiwavelength Study of Equatorial Coronal-Hole Jets", "authors": [ "Pankaj Kumar", "Judith T. Karpen", "Spiro K. Antiochos", "Peter F. Wyper", "C. Richard DeVore", "Craig E. DeForest" ], "comment": "ApJ (in press), 16 pages, 6 figures", "categories": [ "astro-ph.SR" ], "abstract": "Jets (transient/collimated plasma ejections) occur frequently throughout the solar corona and contribute mass/energy to the corona and solar wind. By combining numerical simulations and high-resolution observations, we have made substantial progress recently on determining the energy buildup and release processes in these jets. Here we describe a study of 27 equatorial coronal-hole jets using Solar Dynamics Observatory/AIA and HMI observations on 2013 June 27-28 and 2014 January 8-10. Out of 27 jets, 18 (67%) are associated with mini-filament ejections; the other 9 (33%) do not show mini-filament eruptions but do exhibit mini-flare arcades and other eruptive signatures. This indicates that every jet in our sample involved a filament-channel eruption. From the complete set of events, 6 jets (22%) are apparently associated with tiny flux-cancellation events at the polarity inversion line, and 2 jets (7%) are associated with sympathetic eruptions of filaments from neighboring bright points. Potential-field extrapolations of the source-region photospheric magnetic fields reveal that all jets originated in the fan-spine topology of an embedded bipole associated with an extreme ultraviolet coronal bright point. Hence, all our jets are in agreement with the breakout model of solar eruptions. We present selected examples and discuss the implications for the jet energy build-up and initiation mechanisms.", "revisions": [ { "version": "v1", "updated": "2019-02-03T16:40:26.000Z" } ], "analyses": { "keywords": [ "equatorial coronal-hole jets", "multiwavelength study", "extreme ultraviolet coronal bright point", "source-region photospheric magnetic fields reveal" ], "note": { "typesetting": "TeX", "pages": 16, "language": "en", "license": "arXiv", "status": "editable" } } }