scholarly journals An estimate of large-scale solar wind density and velocity profiles in a coronal hole and the coronal streamer belt

1997 ◽  
Vol 102 (A11) ◽  
pp. 24151-24160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Pätzold ◽  
Bruce T. Tsurutani ◽  
Michael K. Bird
2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Ofman ◽  
E. Provornikova ◽  
L. Abbo ◽  
S. Giordano

Abstract. Observations of streamers in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emission with SOHO/UVCS show dramatic differences in line profiles and latitudinal variations in heavy ion emission compared to hydrogen Ly-α emission. In order to use ion emission observations of streamers as the diagnostics of the slow solar wind properties, an adequate model of a streamer including heavy ions is required. We extended a previous 2.5-D multi-species magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) model of a coronal streamer to 3-D spherical geometry, and in the first approach we consider a tilted dipole configuration of the solar magnetic field. The aim of the present study is to test the 3-D results by comparing to previous 2.5-D model result for a 3-D case with moderate departure from azimuthal symmetry. The model includes O5+ ions with preferential empirical heating and allows for calculation of their density, velocity and temperature in coronal streamers. We present the first results of our 3-D multi-fluid model showing the parameters of protons, electrons and heavy ions (O5+) at the steady-state solar corona with a tilted steamer belt. We find that the 3-D results are in qualitative agreement with our previous 2.5-D model, and show longitudinal variation in the variables in accordance with the tilted streamer belt structure. Properties of heavy coronal ions obtained from the 3-D model together with EUV spectroscopic observations of streamers will help understanding the 3-D structures of streamers reducing line-of-sight integration ambiguities and identifying the sources of the slow solar wind in the lower corona. This leads to improved understanding of the physics of the slow solar wind.


1997 ◽  
Vol 102 (A3) ◽  
pp. 4673-4679 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. U. Crooker ◽  
A. J. Lazarus ◽  
J. L. Phillips ◽  
J. T. Steinberg ◽  
A. Szabo ◽  
...  

Solar Physics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 295 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Téo Bloch ◽  
Clare Watt ◽  
Mathew Owens ◽  
Leland McInnes ◽  
Allan R. Macneil

2008 ◽  
Vol 56 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 398-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.A. Dalin ◽  
Yu.I. Yermolaev ◽  
G.N. Zastenker ◽  
M.O. Riazantseva

The interplanetary medium consists primarily of the supersonic solar wind, carrying the frozen-in magnetic field extending from the solar corona. The properties of this medium are controlled by the state of the corona and by dynamic processes occurring in the medium itself. As a result, there are significant variations in those properties as a function of heliolatitude. In situ observations over the past three decades have been largely confined to the neighbourhood of the solar equatorial plane. While many of the important processes have been identified and studied extensively, observations are required as a function of heliolatitude to define large-scale structures and their dependence on processes in the solar corona. The Ulysses mission, launched in October 1990, is the first space probe dedicated to the exploration of the heliosphere out of the ecliptic plane. By January 1994, the spacecraft had reached a heliolatitude of 50° south. The first results of the mission are summarized here, including the evolution and disappearance of the interplanetary magnetic sector structure; the onset of the dominance of the high-speed solar wind stream originating in the expanding southern coronal hole; observations of the signatures of complex coronal mass ejections; the high-latitude structure of the heliospheric magnetic field, and the evolution of corotating interaction regions as a function of heliolatitude. In particular, the abrupt change in the rotation rate of the sector structure in mid-1992, followed by the equatorward extension of the southern polar coronal hole, represent new observations related to the evolution of large-scale coronal structures and solar magnetic fields and to processes controlling the solar activity cycle.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Woolley ◽  
Lorenzo Matteini ◽  
Timothy S Horbury ◽  
Ronan Laker ◽  
Lloyd D Woodham ◽  
...  

<p>The slow solar wind is thought to consist of a component originating close to the Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS) in the streamer belt and a component from over-expanded coronal hole boundaries. In order to understand the roles of these contributions with different origin, it is important to separate and characterise them. By exploiting the fact that Parker Solar Probe’s fourth and fifth orbits were the same and the solar conditions were similar, we identify intervals of slow polar coronal hole wind sampled at approximately the same heliocentric distance and latitude. Here, solar wind properties are compared, highlighting typical conditions of the slow coronal hole wind closer to the Sun than ever before. We explore different properties of the plasma, including composition, spectra and microphysics, and discuss possible origins for the features that are observed.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgeniy Maiewski ◽  
Helmi Malova ◽  
Roman Kislov ◽  
Victor Popov ◽  
Anatoly Petrukovich ◽  
...  

<p>When spacecraft cross the heliospheric plasma sheet (HPS) that separates large-scale magnetic sectors of the opposite direction in the solar wind, multiple rapid fluctuations of a sign of the radial magnetic field component are observed very often, indicating the presence of multiple current sheets occurring within the HPS. Possible mechanisms of formation of these structures in the solar wind are proposed. Taking into accout that the streamer belt in the solar corona is believed to be the main source of the slow solar wind in the heliosphere, we suggest that the effect of the multi-layered HPS is determined by the extension of many streamer-belt-borne thin current sheets oriented along the neutral line of the interplanetary magnetic field. Within the framework of a proposed MHD model, self-consistent distributions of the key solar wind characteristics which depend on streamer propreties are investigated. It is shown that both single and multiple streamers that are capable of reaching a remote boundary surface can form the observed multiple current sheets with azimuthal currents alternating in direction inside the HPS. The implications of these results for the interpretation of observations in the solar wind are discussed.</p>


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