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Featured researches published by Jiaben Lin.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

STATISTICAL STUDY OF CORONAL MASS EJECTIONS WITH AND WITHOUT DISTINCT LOW CORONAL SIGNATURES

S. Ma; G. D. R. Attrill; Leon Golub; Jiaben Lin

Taking advantage of the two viewpoints of the STEREO spacecraft, we present a statistical study of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) with and without distinct low coronal signatures (LCSs) from 2009 January 1 to August 31. During this period, the lines of sight from STEREO A and B are almost perpendicular and nearly a quarter of the Sun was observed by both. We identified 34 CMEs that originated from around this area and find that (1) about 1 out of 3 CMEs that were studied during 8 months of solar minimum activity are stealth CMEs; a CME is stealth if no distinct LCS (such as coronal dimming, coronal wave, filament eruption, flare, post-eruptive arcade) can be found on the disk. (2) The speeds of the stealth CMEs without LCSs are typically below 300 km s(-1). Comparing with the slow CMEs with LCSs, the stealth CMEs did not show any clear differences in their velocity and acceleration evolution. (3) The source regions of the stealth CMEs are usually located in the quiet Sun rather than active regions. Detailed study indicates that more than half of the stealth CMEs in this paper showed some faint change of the coronal structures (likely parts of flux ropes) when they could be observed over the solar limb before or during the CME evolution. Finally, we note that space weather detection systems based on LCSs totally independent of coronagraph data may fail to detect a significant proportion of CMEs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

CATASTROPHE VERSUS INSTABILITY FOR THE ERUPTION OF A TOROIDAL SOLAR MAGNETIC FLUX ROPE

Berhard Kliem; Jiaben Lin; Terry G. Forbes; E. R. Priest; T Torok

The onset of a solar eruption is formulated here as either a magnetic catastrophe or as an instability. Both start with the same equation of force balance governing the underlying equilibria. Using a toroidal flux rope in an external bipolar or quadrupolar field as a model for the current-carrying flux, we demonstrate the occurrence of a fold catastrophe by loss of equilibrium for several representative evolutionary sequences in the stable domain of parameter space. We verify that this catastrophe and the torus instability occur at the same point; they are thus equivalent descriptions for the onset condition of solar eruptions.


Chinese Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Solar Magnetism and the Activity Telescope at HSOS

Hongqi Zhang; Dong-Guang Wang; Yuanyong Deng; Keliang Hu; J. T. Su; Jiaben Lin; Gang-Hua Lin; Shi-Mo Yang; Wei-Jun Mao; Ya-Nan Wang; Qi-Qian Hu; Jun-Sun Xue; Hai-Tian Lu; HouKun Ni; Han-Liang Chen; Xiao-Jun Zhou; Qing-Sheng Zhu; Lü-Jun Yuan; Yong Zhu

A new solar telescope system is described, which has been operating at Huairou Solar Observing Station (HSOS), National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), since the end of 2005. This instrument, the Solar Magnetism and Activity Telescope (SMAT), comprises two telescopes which respectively make measurements of full solar disk vector magnetic field and Hα observation. The core of the full solar disk video vector magnetograph is a birefringent filter with 0.1A bandpass, installed in the tele-centric optical system of the telescope. We present some preliminary observational results of the full solar disk vector magnetograms and Hα filtergrams obtained with this telescope system.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

A FLUX ROPE ERUPTION TRIGGERED BY JETS

Juan Guo; Yu Liu; Hongqi Zhang; Yuanyong Deng; Jiaben Lin; Jiangtao Su

We present an observation of a filament eruption caused by recurrent chromospheric plasma injections (surges/jets) on 2006 July 6. The filament eruption was associated with an M2.5 two-ribbon flare and a coronal mass ejection (CME). There was a light bridge in the umbra of the main sunspot of NOAA 10898; one end of the filament was terminated at the region close to the light bridge, and recurrent surges were observed to be ejected from the light bridge. The surges occurred intermittently for about 8 hr before the filament eruption, and finally a clear jet was found at the light bridge to trigger the filament eruption. We analyzed the evolutions of the relative darkness of the filament and the loaded mass by the continuous surges quantitatively. It was found that as the occurrence of the surges, the relative darkness of the filament body continued growing for about 3-4 hr, reached its maximum, and kept stable for more than 2 hr until it erupted. If suppose 50% of the ejected mass by the surges could be trapped by the filament channel, then the total loaded mass into the filament channelwill be about 0.57x10(16) g with a momentum of 0.57x10(22) g cm s(-1) by 08:08 UT, which is a non-negligible effect on the stability of the filament. Based on the observations, we present a model showing the important role that recurrent chromospheric mass injection play in the evolution and eruption of a flux rope. Our study confirms that the surge activities can efficiently supply the necessary material for some filament formation. Furthermore, our study indicates that the continuous mass with momentum loaded by the surge activities to the filament channel could make the filament unstable and cause it to erupt.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

DISPERSAL OF G-BAND BRIGHT POINTS AT DIFFERENT LONGITUDINAL MAGNETIC FIELD STRENGTHS

Yunfei Yang; Kaifai Ji; Song Feng; Hui Deng; Feng Wang; Jiaben Lin

G-band bright points (GBPs) are thought to be the foot-points of magnetic flux tubes. The aim of this paper is to investigate the relation between the diffusion regimes of GBPs and the associated longitudinal magnetic field strengths. Two high resolution observations of different magnetized environments were acquired with the Hinode/ Solar Optical Telescope. Each observation was recorded simultaneously with G-band filtergrams and Narrow-band Filter Imager (NFI) Stokes I and V images. GBPs are identified and tracked automatically, and then categorized into several groups by their longitudinal magnetic field strengths, which are extracted from the calibrated NFI magnetograms using a point-by-point method. The Lagrangian approach and the distribution of diffusion indices approach are adopted separately to explore the diffusion regime of GBPs for each group. It is found that the values of diffusion index and diffusion coefficient both decrease exponentially with the increasing longitudinal magnetic field strengths whichever approach is used. The empirical formulas deduced from the fitting equations are proposed to describe these relations. Stronger elements tend to diffuse more slowly than weak elements, independently of the magnetic flux of the surrounding medium. This may be because the magnetic energy of stronger elements is not negligible compared with the kinetic energy of the gas, and therefore the flows cannot perturb them so easily.


Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Characterizing motion types of G-band bright points in the quiet Sun

Yunfei Yang; Hui-Xue Qu; Kaifan Ji; Song Feng; Hui Deng; Jiaben Lin; Feng Wang

We study the motion of G-band bright points (GBPs) in the quiet Sun to obtain the characteristics of different motion types. A high resolution image sequence taken with the Hinode/Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) is used, and GBPs are automatically tracked by segmenting 3D evolutional structures in a space-time cube. After putting the GBPs that do not move during their lifetimes aside, the non-stationary GBPs are categorized into three types based on an index of their motion type. Most GBPs that move in straight or nearly straight lines are categorized as a straight motion type, a few moving in rotary paths into rotary motion, and the others fall into a motion type we called erratic. The mean horizontal velocities are 2.18 +/- 0.08 k m s(-1), 1.63 +/- 0.09 k m s(-1) and 1.33 +/- 0.07 k m s(-1) for straight, erratic and rotary motion types, respectively. We find that a GBP drifts at a higher and constant velocity during its whole life if it moves in a straight line. However, it has a lower and variational velocity if it moves on a rotary path. The diffusive process is ballistic-, super-and sub-diffusion for straight, erratic and rotary motion types, respectively. The corresponding diffusion index (gamma) and coefficients (K) are 2.13 +/- 0.09 and 850 +/- 37 k m(2) s(-1), 1.82 +/- 0.07 and 331 +/- 24 k m(2) s(-1), and 0.73 +/- 0.19 and 13 +/- 9 k m(2) s(-1). In terms of direction of motion, it is homogeneous and isotropic, and usually persists between neighboring frames, no matter what motion type a GBP is classified as.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

An MHD Model for Magnetar Giant Flares

Yan-Zhi Meng; Jiaben Lin; L. Zhang; K. K. Reeves; Q. S. Zhang; F. Yuan

Giant flares on soft gamma-ray repeaters that are thought to take place on magnetars release enormous energy in a short time interval. Their power can be explained by catastrophic instabilities occurring in the magnetic field configuration and the subsequent magnetic reconnection. By analogy with the coronal mass ejection events on the Sun, we develop a theoretical model via an analytic approach for magnetar giant flares. In this model, the rotation and/or displacement of the crust causes the field to twist and deform, leading to flux rope formation in the magnetosphere and energy accumulation in the related configuration. When the energy and helicity stored in the configuration reach a threshold, the system loses its equilibrium, the flux rope is ejected outward in a catastrophic way, and magnetic reconnection helps the catastrophe develop to a plausible eruption. By taking SGR 1806-20 as an example, we calculate the free magnetic energy released in such an eruptive process and find that it is more than 10(47) erg, which is enough to power a giant flare. The released free magnetic energy is converted into radiative energy, kinetic energy, and gravitational energy of the flux rope. We calculated the light curves of the eruptive processes for the giant flares of SGR 1806-20, SGR 0526-66, and SGR 1900+14, and compared them with the observational data. The calculated light curves are in good agreement with the observed light curves of giant flares.


Solar Physics | 2016

On the Relationship Between G-Band Bright Point Dynamics and Their Magnetic Field Strengths

Yunfei Yang; Qiang Li; Kaifan Ji; Song Feng; Hui Deng; Feng Wang; Jiaben Lin

G-band bright points (GBPs) are regarded as good manifestations of magnetic flux concentrations. We aim to investigate the relation between the dynamic properties of GBPs and their longitudinal magnetic field strengths. High spatial and temporal resolution observations were recorded simultaneously with G-band filtergrams and Narrow-band Filter Imager (NFI) Stokes I


Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Evolution of isolated G-band bright points: size, intensity and velocity

Yunfei Yang; Jiaben Lin; Song Feng; Kaifan Ji; Hui Deng; Feng Wang

I


Journal of the Korean Astronomical Society | 2013

DETECTION AND RESTORATION OF NON-RADIAL VARIATION OVER FULL-DISK SOLAR IMAGES

Yunfei Yang; Jiaben Lin; Song Feng; Hui Deng; Feng Wang; Kaifan Ji

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Song Feng

Kunming University of Science and Technology

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Kaifan Ji

Kunming University of Science and Technology

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Yuanyong Deng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yunfei Yang

Kunming University of Science and Technology

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Feng Wang

Kunming University of Science and Technology

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Hui Deng

Kunming University of Science and Technology

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Juan Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Keliang Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Bingxiang Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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