The Interstellar Medium Near the Sun

Author(s):  
Frederick C. Bruhweiler ◽  
Alfred Vidal-Madjar
Keyword(s):  
1984 ◽  
Vol 81 ◽  
pp. 64-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Bruhweiler ◽  
W. Oegerle ◽  
E. Weiler ◽  
R. Stencel ◽  
Y. Kondo

AbstractWe have combined Copernicus and IUE observations of 5 stars within 50 pc of the Sun to study the ionization of magnesium in the local interstellar medium (LISM). The high resolution Copernicus spectrometer was used to detect interstellar Mg I 2852 in the spectra of α Gru, α Eri, and α Lyr, while placing upper limits on Mg I in the spectra of α CMa and α PsA. Observations of Mg II 2795, 2802 for these stars were also obtained with IUE and Copernicus. The column densities of Mg I and Mg II are used to place constraints on the temperature of the LISM.


1983 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 385-392
Author(s):  
Donald P. Cox

We observe the heating of interstellar material in young supernova remnants (SNR). In addition, when analyzing the soft X-ray background we find evidence for large isolated regions of apparently hot, low density material. These, we infer, may have been heated by supernovae. One such region seems to surround the Sun. This has been modeled as a supernova remnant viewed from within. The most reasonable parameters are ambient density no ~ 0.004 cm−3, radius of about 100 pc, age just over 105 years (Cox and Anderson 1982).


1997 ◽  
Vol 166 ◽  
pp. 195-198
Author(s):  
R. Génova ◽  
J. E. Beckman ◽  
J. Rodríguez Álamo

AbstractObservations of interstellar Na I in the spectra of 93 stars within 315 pc from the Sun show that it lies in a tunnel of gas moving away from Scorpio-Centaurus and is surrounded by gas moving toward the Galactic center.Gas approaches the Sun from Scorpio-Centaurus expanding from (r, l, b)=(160 pc, 313°7, +28°2) with LSR velocity 15.3 km s−1. The radius of this shell is 153 pc.We identify these clouds:D: velocity vector (υd, ld, bd)=(+7.2 km s−1, 305°1, −13°5), above and below the Galactic plane (GP) in the range of Galactic longitudes 357°–55°.C: velocity vector (υc, lc, bc)=(+11.5 km s−1, 349°0, −35°2), above and below the GP in the range 30°≤l≤110°.M: velocity vector (υm, lm, bm)=(+21.9 km s−1, 34°2, +1°5), above and below the GP in the range 100°≤l≤130°.P: velocity vector (υp, lp, bp)=(+13.8 km s−1, 244°9, +5°4), above and below the GP from l~120° to the limit of our data at l~210°.E: velocity vector (υe, le, be)=(+16.8 km s−1, 208°4, +6°2) in the range 160°≤l≤185° and −10°≤b≤–35°.A: velocity vector (υa, la, ba)=(+12.9 km s−1, 73°6, −5°6) towards the Galactic anti-center, below the GP.I: velocity vector (υi, li, bi)=(+37.7 km s−1, 132°8, −64°3) towards the Galactic anti-center, above the GP.


1996 ◽  
Vol 152 ◽  
pp. 261-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fredrick C. Bruhweiler

We are finally on the threshold of obtaining a coherent morphological and physical picture for the local interstellar medium (LISM), especially the region within 300 pc of the Sun. The EUVE is playing a special role in revealing this picture. This instrument can provide direct measurements of the the radiation field that photoionizes both hydrogen and helium. It also can yield direct measurements of the column densities of hydrogen, but especially He I and He II toward nearby white dwarfs. These observations suggest that the ionization in the Local Cloud, the cloud in which the Sun is embedded, is not in equilibrium, but in a recombination phase. Heuristic calculations imply that the the present ionization is due to the passage of shocks, at times greater than 3 × 106 years ago. The origin of these shocks are probably linked to the supernova which was responsible for the expanding nebular complex of clouds know as the Loop I supernova remnant, of which the Local Cloud is a part, extreme- UV radiation field, that which ionizes both hydrogen and helium in the LISM. Of the ISM within 300 pc, the volume appears to be predominantly filled by hot (106 K) coronal gas. This gas is laced with six largescale shell structures with diameters ~100−150 pc including the long-recognized radio loops, Loop I−IV, as well as the Orion-Eridanus and Gum Nebulae are identified. An idea that has evolved in the literature for over two decades is that the kinematically-linked OB associations representing Gould’s Belt, plus the gas and dust of Lindblad’s Ring, require that previous supernova activity and stellar winds carved out a 400–600 pc diameter cavity some 3 to 6 × 107 yr ago. This activity produced a pre-existing low density region, into which the present young loop structures have expanded. The outer boundaries of the identified expanding loop structures, inside this preexisting cavity, delineate the periphery of the the mis-named “local interstellar bubble.” Thus, this picture naturally explains some of the problems often associated with the presence of this low density region exterior to Loop I.


2011 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 237-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Priscilla C. Frisch ◽  
Seth Redfield ◽  
Jonathan D. Slavin
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Bemporad ◽  
Olga Katushkina ◽  
Vladislav Izmodenov ◽  
Dimitra Koutroumpa ◽  
Eric Quemerais

<p>The Sun modulates with the solar wind flow the shape of the whole Heliosphere interacting with the surrounding interstellar medium. Recent results from IBEX and INCA experiments, as well as recent measurements from Voyager 1 and 2, demonstrated that this interaction is much more complex and subject to temporal and heliolatitudinal variations than previously thought. These variations could be also related with the evolution of solar wind during its journey through the Heliosphere. Hence, understanding how the solar wind evolves from its acceleration region in the inner corona to the Heliospheric boundaries is very important.</p><p>In this work, SWAN Lyman-α full-sky observations from SOHO are combined for the very first time with measurements acquired in the inner corona by SOHO UVCS and LASCO instruments, to trace the solar wind expansion from the Sun to 1 AU. The solar wind mass flux in the inner corona was derived over one full solar rotation period in 1997, based on LASCO polarized brightness measurements, and on the Doppler dimming technique applied to UVCS Lyman-α emission from neutral H coronal atoms due to resonant scattering of chromospheric radiation. On the other hand, the SWAN Lyman-α emission (due to back-scattering from neutral H atoms in the interstellar medium) was analyzed based on numerical models of the interstellar hydrogen distribution in the heliosphere and the radiation transfer. The SWAN full-sky Lyman-α intensity maps are used for solving of the inverse problem and deriving of the solar wind mass flux at 1 AU from the Sun as a function of heliolatitude. First results from this comparison for a chosen time period in 1997 are described here, and possible future applications for Solar Orbiter data are discussed.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 272-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wojciech Konior ◽  
Romana Ratkiewicz ◽  
Jan Kotlarz

Purpose This paper aims to review the current knowledge about the neutral component of the local interstellar medium (LISM), which due to the resonant charge exchange, photoionization and electron impact ionization processes has a profound impact on the heliosphere structure. Design/methodology/approach This work is based on the heliospheric literature review. Findings The summary of four major effects of neutral hydrogen atoms penetrating solar wind (SW), i.e. the disappearance of the complicated flow structure; the emergence of “hydrogen wall” in front of the heliopause (HP); decreasing distance of termination shock (TS), HP and bow shock (BS) layer from the Sun; and recently discovered by the Interstellar Boundary Explorer mission, a region of enhanced energetic neutral atom (ENA) emission seen in all sky maps as a ribbon. Practical implications In the context of constantly developing space technologies in aerospace engineering and prospective deep space missions, there is a need of general reviews about the interstellar space surroundings of the Sun and gathering the knowledge to help in theoretical, numerical and experimental investigations such as the optimization of the scientific equipment and spacecraft structure to work in specific conditions. Originality/value The survey encapsulate basic and relevant processes playing an important role in the physics of the nearest surroundings of the Sun and the latest results of numerical and experimental investigations focused on the neutral LISM component and its influence on the heliosphere, which is strongly desired in future works. Until now, not many of such reviews have been done.


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