Critical Height of the Torus Instability in Two-ribbon Solar Flares
Wang, Yuming; Liu, Rui; Liu, Jiajia; Liu, Kai; Chen, Jun; Zhou, Zhenjun; Zhang, Min; Wang, Dong
China
Abstract
We studied the background field for 60 two-ribbon flares of M-and-above classes during 2011-2015. These flares are categorized into two groups, I.e., eruptive and confined flares, based on whether a flare is associated with a coronal mass ejection or not. The background field of source active regions is approximated by a potential field extrapolated from the B z component of vector magnetograms provided by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager. We calculated the decay index n of the background field above the flaring polarity inversion line, and defined a critical height h crit corresponding to the theoretical threshold (n crit = 1.5) of the torus instability. We found that h crit is approximately half of the distance between the centroids of opposite polarities in active regions and that the distribution of h crit is bimodal: it is significantly higher for confined flares than for eruptive ones. The decay index increases monotonously with increasing height for 86% (84%) of the eruptive (confined) flares but displays a saddle-like profile for the rest, 14% (16%), which are found exclusively in active regions of multipolar field configuration. Moreover, n at the saddle bottom is significantly smaller in confined flares than that in eruptive ones. These results highlight the critical role of background field in regulating the eruptive behavior of two-ribbon flares.