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Creators/Authors contains: "Cho, Kyung-Suk"

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  1. Abstract Small-scale jets, such as chromospheric and transition region (TR) network jets, are of great interest regarding coronal heating and solar wind acceleration. Spectroscopic analysis based on multiple spectral lines with different formation temperatures is essential for understanding the physical properties and driving mechanisms of jets. Here, we conduct an investigation of the physical properties of a small-scale chromospheric jet in a quiet-Sun network region and its TR counterpart. This jet is recorded from formation to extinction using the Fast Imaging Solar Spectrograph at the Goode Solar Telescope and the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph. The chromospheric component of the jet exhibits a high line-of-sight speed of up to 45 km s−1during its ascending phase, accompanied by spectral profiles akin to rapid blueshifted excursion and downflowing rapid redshifted excursion during the descending phase. Using a cloud model combined with a Multi-Layer Spectral Inversion, we quantify the jet’s temperature during its ascending phase, which starts at approximately 11,000 K and increases by only 1000 K over 1 minute, much smaller than a few 104K, the excess temperature expected in an ideal gas reconnection jet at an outflow speed of 45 km s−1. The TR counterpart exhibits a Siiv1394 Å line profile with a non-Gaussian shape, including a blueshifted component and a large nonthermal width. Our results suggest that if the jet is driven by magnetic reconnection in the chromosphere, the heat released by the reconnection may be mostly used to ionize the hydrogen rather than to increase the temperature so that the gas may appear almost isothermal. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 7, 2026
  2. Abstract Mutual conversion of various kinds of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves can have profound impacts on wave propagation, energy transfer, and heating of the solar chromosphere and corona. Mode conversion occurs when an MHD wave travels through a region where the Alfvén and sound speeds are equal (e.g., a 3D magnetic null point). Here we report the direct extreme ultraviolet (EUV) imaging of mode conversion from a fast-mode to a slow-mode MHD wave near a 3D null point using Solar Dynamics Observatory/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA) observations. An incident fast EUV wavefront associated with an adjacent eruptive flare propagates laterally through a neighboring pseudostreamer. Shortly after the passage of the fast EUV wave through the null point, a slow-mode wave appears near the null that propagates upward along the open structures and simultaneously downward along the separatrix encompassing the fan loops of the pseudostreamer base. These observations suggest the existence of mode conversion near 3D nulls in the solar corona, as predicted by theory and MHD simulations. Moreover, we observe decaying transverse oscillations in both the open and closed structures of the pseudostreamer, along with quasiperiodic type III radio bursts indicative of repetitive episodes of electron acceleration. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
  3. Abstract Plumes are bright structures in coronal holes extending from the solar surface into the corona and are considered as a possible source of the solar wind. Plumes are thought to be rooted in strong unipolar photospheric flux patches (network/plage region). The magnetic activities at the base of plumes may play a crucial role in producing outflows and propagating disturbances (PDs). However, the role of photospheric/chromospheric activities (e.g., jets/spicules) at the base of plumes and their connection to PDs is poorly understood. Using high-resolution observations of a plume taken on 2020 July 23 with the 1.6 m Goode Solar Telescope (GST), Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), and the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory, we analyzed chromospheric/transition region activities at the base of the plume and their connection to outflows/PDs in the plume. The GST Visible Imaging Spectrometer images reveal repetitive spicules with blueshifted emission (pseudo-Doppler maps) at the plume’s footpoint. In addition, the photospheric magnetograms provide evidence of mixed polarities at the base of the plume. The IRIS Mg ii k Dopplergrams show strong blueshifted emission (∼50 km s −1 ) and a high brightness temperature (Mg ii k2 line) at the footpoint of the plume. The long-period PDs ( P ≈ 20–25 minutes) along the plume (AIA 171 Å) match the periodicity of spicules in the chromospheric images, suggesting a close connection between the spicules and the PDs. We suggest that the interchange reconnection between the closed and open flux of the coronal bright point at the plume’s footpoint is the most likely candidate to produce upflows and associated PDs along the plume. 
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  4. We report a detailed analysis of a failed eruption and flare in active region 12018 on 2014 April 3 using multiwavelength observations from the Solar Dynamics Observatory/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly, IRIS, STEREO, and Hinode/Solar Optical Telescope. At least four jets were observed to emanate from the cusp of this small active region (large bright point) with a null-point topology during the 2 hr prior to the slow rise of a filament. During the filament slow rise multiple plasma blobs were seen, most likely formed in a null-point current sheet near the cusp. The subsequent filament eruption, which was outside the IRIS field of view, was accompanied by a flare but remained confined. During the explosive flare reconnection phase, additional blobs appeared repetitively and moved bidirectionally within the flaring region below the erupting filament. The filament kinked, rotated, and underwent leg–leg reconnection as it rose, yet it failed to produce a coronal mass ejection. Tiny jet-like features in the fan loops were detected during the filament slow rise/preflare phase. We interpret them as signatures of reconnection between the ambient magnetic field and the plasmoids leaving the null-point sheet and streaming along the fan loops. We contrast our interpretation of these tiny jets, which occur within the large-scale context of a failed filament eruption, with the local nanoflare-heating scenario proposed by Antolin et al. 
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  5. Evans, Christopher J.; Bryant, Julia J.; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)
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  7. null (Ed.)