Recurrent Coronal Jets and QPPs: Periodic Reconnection and Localized Heating Across Quiet-Sun to Active Regions

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Recurrent Coronal Jets and QPPs: Periodic Reconnection and Localized Heating Across Quiet-Sun to Active Regions

Authors

Sudheer K. Mishra, Kartika Sangal, Balveer Singh, Ayumi Asai, A. K. Srivastava, Ding Yuan

Abstract

We analyze quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) in recurrent coronal jets driven by periodic magnetic reconnection associated with successive flux emergence in the fan-spine magnetic topologies. Using the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), we investigate three long-lived recurring jets spanning quiet Sun to moderate-field-strength regions, each exhibiting recurrent eruptions linked to episodic reconnection. Wavelet analysis of multithermal AIA EUV jet-base light curves detects QPPs with periods of 6-13 min, exceeding typical p-mode oscillation periods. Distance-time analysis reveals quasi-periodic propagating ridges, interpreted as recurrent field-aligned plasma ejections, and morphological similarities to slow magnetoacoustic waves, which cannot be entirely excluded. However, the dominant photospheric unsigned flux periodicities of 10-32 min at the jet source regions favor the reconnection-driven interpretation. DEM analysis confirms multithermal plasma with the hottest emission concentrated near the jet base, and the QPP periods fall well below both radiative and conductive cooling timescales, implying persistent localized heating within the fan-spine configuration. These results demonstrate that periodic reconnection in fan-spine topologies drives recurrent jet eruptions and contributes to localized coronal heating across the quiet Sun, moderate-field strength regions, and active regions.

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