Abstract
Abstract
We measure current helicity (H
r
c
) as well as proxies for twist (α
r
) and writhe (W) in the isolated magnetic knots of three delta (δ)-sunspots and report that the observations are consistent with a kink instability acting on a highly twisted flux tube. δ-spots are active regions (ARs) in which positive and negative umbrae share a penumbra. We identify and isolate “magnetic knots,” i.e., opposite polarity umbrae that are in close proximity and forming the δ-configuration, in ARs NOAA 11158, 11267, and 11476 as observed with data from the Solar Dynamic Observatory Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager. We find that H
r
c
, α
r
, and W have the same sign for each magnetic knot, as predicted in simulations of a kink instability acting on highly twisted flux tubes. The deformed flux tube causing the δ-formation, the magnetic knot, is only a portion of the entire AR and demonstrates the potential for the kink instability to act on a smaller spatial scale within the AR. Each magnetic footpoint contains a single sign of the radial current, J
r
, which suggests that we are observing the core of the flux rope without return currents. As a counterexample, we analyze one β-spot that shows H
r
c
and α
r
have the opposite signs of W. While our observations support the formation mechanism of the magnetic knots in δ-spots being the kink instability, a much larger sample is needed to determine confidently the prevalence of the kink instability as the cause of flux tube deformation.
Funder
NASA HSR
NASA Drive Center COFFIES
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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