XRT Picture of the Week (XPOW)

XRT Home XRT Mission Ops YouTube



2010 October 29


Click image for movie. Also available on YouTube


Evolving Sigmoid Loops

This sequence of images (click for the movie) depicts active region 11093 on 11-Aug-2010. As you can see, the collection of loops, when viewed all together, resemble a large backwards 'S'. For this reason we call such an active region "sigmoidal". Most of the time, there's no one single loop that traces out a full S-shape, but in this case XRT happened to catch a pair of shorter loops joining together to complete the shape. At 01:50:20, there is a clear gap between the northern and southern loops; but just a few minutes later (01:56:37) a bright knot begins to appear. By 02:09:15, the bright knot is too intense for XRT's detector, resulting in the big bloom of saturated pixels. This indicates that a large amount of energy was released at the junction of those two loops, causing the plasma to be super-heated to millions of degrees. And at 02:16:35 we can see the result: the connection of "north loop" to "south loop" has created a single long, S-shaped loop. It's the act of connecting those loops -- a process referred to as "magnetic reconnection" -- that releases the energy and produces the heat.


Keywords: Sigmoid, Flare
Filters: Ti_poly


(Submitted by D. McKenzie)

Back Archive Next