Abstract:
We present multi-wavelength observations of an asymmetric filament eruption and associated coronal mass
ejection (CME) and coronal downflows on 2012 June 17 and 18 from 20:00–05:00 UT. We use SDO/AIA
and STEREO-B/SECCHI observations to understand the filament eruption scenario and its kinematics, while
LASCO C2 observations are analyzed to study the kinematics of the CME and associated downflows. SDO/AIA
limb observations show that the filament exhibits a whipping-like asymmetric eruption. STEREO/EUVI disk
observations reveal a two-ribbon flare underneath the southeastern part of the filament that most probably occurred
due to reconnection processes in the coronal magnetic field in the wake of the filament eruption. The whipping-like
filament eruption later produces a slow CME in which the leading edge and the core propagate, with an average
speed of ≈540 km s⁻¹ and ≈126 km s⁻¹, respectively, as observed by the LASCO C2 coronagraph. The CME
core formed by the eruptive flux rope shows outer coronal downflows with an average speed of ≈56 km s⁻¹ after
reaching ≈4.33 R☉. Initially, the core decelerates at ≈48 m s⁻². The plasma first decelerates gradually up to a
height of ≈4.33 R☉ and then starts accelerating downward. We suggest a self-consistent model of a magnetic
flux rope representing the magnetic structure of the CME core formed by an eruptive filament. This rope loses
its previous stable equilibrium when it reaches a critical height. With some reasonable parameters, and inherent
physical conditions, the model describes the non-radial ascending motion of the flux rope in the corona, its stopping
at some height, and thereafter its downward motion. These results are in good agreement with observations.