Self-consistent numerical simulations for the formation and dynamics of solar prominences

Abstract

Solar prominences are cool and dense plasma structures floating in the hot solar corona. They are ubiquitous features in the solar atmosphere, but their formation mechanism is still unclear. Here we perform comprehensive fully three-dimensional numerical simulations of prominence formation including the physics necessary to describe all atmospheric layers of the sun. With appropriate initial conditions for the magnetic field, solar prominences form self-consistently in the simulations. The formation starts by the random ejection of a dense plasma seed from the chromosphere into the corona. Subsequently, the prominence is built up by a combination of plasma injections from the chromosphere and condensation of inflowing coronal plasma. The prominence properties qualitatively match those of observed prominences. Our findings demonstrate the importance of the dynamics at and below the solar surface in the formation and evolution of solar prominences. This suggests that subsurface dynamics should also be considered in the study of prominence eruptions, which can be associated with coronal mass ejections.

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