Abstract
We report the results of our investigation of a giant eruptive
prominence (initial mass ~
6x10^{16} g) using microwave, X-ray, and white-light observations. The
prominence erupted
from the northwest limb of the Sun on 1994 April 5. The speed of the
prominence was only ~70 km
s ^{-1} when it reached a height of ~0.5 R_{solar} above the solar
surface. In X-rays, a large
region with reduced X-ray emission was observed enveloping the initial
location of the
prominence and extending to much larger heights. At the bottom of this
depletion and beneath the
eruptive prominence, an X-ray arcade formed, progressively spreading
from south to north along
the limb. This is the first time a direct detailed comparison is made
between coronal dimming and a
prominence eruption. We were able to confirm that the coronal dimming is
indeed a near-surface
manifestation of the coronal mass ejection (CME). The orientation of the
structures involved did
not allow the observations of the coronal cavity, but all the other
substructures of the CME could
be identified. The mass expelled from the Sun in the form of the
eruptive prominence and the
coronal dimming are comparable. The estimated total mass is somewhat
larger than that reported
in other X-ray-dimming events.