15–20 Mar 2026
Berlin
Europe/Berlin timezone
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Accessing the fine temporal scale of EUV brightenings and their quasi-periodic pulsations: 1 second cadence observations by Solar Orbiter/EUI

16 Mar 2026, 16:50
15m
Harnack Haus (Berlin)

Harnack Haus

Berlin

Speaker

Daye Lim (Royal Observatory of Belgium and KU Leuven)

Description

First Name: Daye
Last Name: Lim
Email Address: daye.lim@oma.be
Affiliation: Royal Observatory of Belgium and KU Leuven

All Authors: Daye Lim, Tom Van Doorsselaere, Nancy Narang, Laura A. Hayes, Emil Kraaikamp, Aadish Joshi, Konstantina Loumou, Cis Verbeeck, David Berghmans, and Krzysztof Barczynski

Abstract: Small-scale extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) transient brightenings are observationally abundant and critically important to investigate. Determining whether they share the same physical mechanisms as larger-scale flares would have significant implications for the coronal heating problem. A recent study has revealed that quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs), a common feature in both solar and stellar flares, may also be present in EUV brightenings in the quiet Sun (QS). We aim to characterise the properties of EUV brightenings and their associated QPPs in both QS and active regions (ARs) using unprecedented 1 s cadence observations from Solar Orbiter’s Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI). We applied an automated detection algorithm to analyse statistical properties of EUV brightenings. QPPs were identified using complementary techniques optimised for both stationary and non-stationary signals, including a Fourier-based method, ensemble empirical mode decomposition, and wavelet analysis. Over 500 000 and 300 000 brightenings were detected in ARs and QS regions, respectively. Brightenings with lifetimes shorter than 3 s were detected, demonstrating the importance of high temporal resolution. The QPP occurrence rates were approximately 11% in AR brightenings and 9% in QS brightenings, with non-stationary QPPs being more common than stationary ones. QPP periods span from 5 to over 500 s and show similar distributions between AR and QS. Moderate linear correlations were found between QPP periods and the lifetime and spatial scale of the associated brightenings, while no significant correlation was found with peak brightness. We found a consistent power-law scaling, with a weak correlation and a large spread, between QPP period and lifetime in EUV brightenings, solar, and stellar flares. The results support the interpretation that EUV brightenings may represent a small-scale manifestation of the same physical mechanisms driving larger solar and stellar flares. Furthermore, the similarity in the statistical properties of EUV brightenings and their associated QPPs between AR and QS regions suggests that the underlying generation mechanisms may not strongly depend on the large scale magnetic environment.

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