Recurrent coronal jets show QPPs of 6-13 min periods driven by periodic reconnection, with flux periodicities and sub-cooling timescales implying persistent localized heating in fan-spine structures.
Prevalence of Small-scale Jets from the Networks of the Solar Transition Region and Chromosphere
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
As the interface between the Sun's photosphere and corona, the chromosphere and transition region play a key role in the formation and acceleration of the solar wind. Observations from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph reveal the prevalence of intermittent small-scale jets with speeds of 80-250 km/s from the narrow bright network lanes of this interface region. These jets have lifetimes of 20-80 seconds and widths of 300 km or less. They originate from small-scale bright regions, often preceded by footpoint brightenings and accompanied by transverse waves with ~20 km/s amplitudes. Many jets reach temperatures of at least ~100000 K and constitute an important element of the transition region structures. They are likely an intermittent but persistent source of mass and energy for the solar wind.
fields
astro-ph.SR 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Recurrent Coronal Jets and QPPs: Periodic Reconnection and Localized Heating Across Quiet-Sun to Active Regions
Recurrent coronal jets show QPPs of 6-13 min periods driven by periodic reconnection, with flux periodicities and sub-cooling timescales implying persistent localized heating in fan-spine structures.