Solar wind speed and rotational shear at coronal hole boundaries, impacts on magnetic field inversions

Author(s):  
Rui Pinto ◽  
Nicolas Poirier ◽  
Athanasis Kouloumvakos ◽  
Alexis Rouillard ◽  
Léa Griton ◽  
...  

<p>The solar wind is frequently perturbed by transient structures such as magnetic folds, jets, waves and flux-ropes that propagate rapidly away from the Sun over a large range of heliocentric distances. Parker Solar Probe has revealed that rotations of the magnetic field vector occur repeatedly at small heliocentric distances, on regions that also display surprisingly large solar wind rotation rates. Sun-to-spacecraft connectivity analysis shows that a large fraction of the solar wind flows probed so far by Parker Solar Probe were formed and accelerated in the vicinity of coronal hole boundaries.<br>We show by means of of global MHD simulations that coronal rotation is highly structured in proximity to those boundary regions (in agreement with preceding SoHO/UVCS observations), and that enhanced poloidal and toroidal flow shear and magnetic field gradients also develop there. We identified regions of the solar corona for which solar wind speed and rotational shear are significant, that can be associated with field-aligned and/or transverse vorticity, and that can be favourable to the development of magnetic deflections. Some of these wind flow shears are driven through large radial extensions, being noticeable tens of solar radii away from the surface, and therefore have a potential impact on the propagation of such magnetic perturbations across extended heights in the solar wind. We conclude that these regions of persistent shears are undoubtedly sources of complex solar wind structures, and suggest that they can trigger instabilities capable of creating magnetic field reversals detected in-situ in the heliosphere.<br>Our simulations furthermore indicate that the spatial structure of the solar wind shear will become more complex as the solar cycle progresses, with strong and extended shears appearing at heliographic latitudes that will be probed by Solar Orbiter in the near future.</p>

2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 957-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. A. Iles ◽  
A. N. Fazakerley ◽  
A. D. Johnstone ◽  
N. P. Meredith ◽  
P. Bühler

Abstract. The relativistic electron response in the outer radiation belt during magnetic storms has been studied in relation to solar wind and geomagnetic parameters during the first six months of 1995, a period in which there were a number of recurrent fast solar wind streams. The relativistic electron population was measured by instruments on board the two microsatellites, STRV-1a and STRV-1b, which traversed the radiation belt four times per day from L ~ 1 out to L ~ 7 on highly elliptical, near-equatorial orbits. Variations in the E > 750 keV and E > 1 MeV electrons during the main phase and recovery phase of 17 magnetic storms have been compared with the solar wind speed, interplanetary magnetic field z-component, Bz , the solar wind dynamic pressure and Dst *. Three different types of electron responses are identified, with outcomes that strongly depend on the solar wind speed and interplanetary magnetic field orientation during the magnetic storm recovery phase. Observations also confirm that the L-shell, at which the peak enhancement in the electron count rate occurs has a dependence on Dst *.Key words. Magnetospheric physics (energetic particles, trapped; storms and substorms) – Space plasma physics (charged particle motion and accelerations)


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-501 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. Zhang ◽  
C. Wang ◽  
B. B. Tang ◽  
H. Li

Abstract. We employ a global magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) model, namely the PPMLR-MHD model, to investigate the effect of the solar wind conditions, such as the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) clock angle, southward IMF magnitude and solar wind speed, on the average pattern of the ionospheric equivalent current systems (ECS). A new method to derive ECS from the MHD model is proposed and applied, which takes account of the oblique magnetic field line effects. The model results indicate that when the IMF is due northward, the ECS are very weak while the current over polar region is stronger than the lower latitude; when the IMF rotates southward, the two-cell current system dominates, the eastward electrojet on the afternoon sector and the westward electrojet on the dawn sector increase rapidly while the westward electrojet is stronger than the eastward electrojet. Under southward IMF, the intensity of the westward electrojet and eastward electrojet both increase with the increase of the southward IMF magnitude and solar wind speed, and the increase is very sharp for the westward electrojet. Furthermore, we compare the geomagnetic perturbations on the ground represented by the simulated average ECS with the observation-based statistical results under similar solar wind conditions. It is found that the model results generally match with the observations, but the underestimation of the eastward equivalent current on the dusk sector is the main limitation of the present model.


2003 ◽  
Vol 30 (23) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Richardson ◽  
C. Wang ◽  
L. F. Burlaga

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathew J. Owens ◽  
Matthew Lang ◽  
Pete Riley ◽  
Mike Lockwood ◽  
Amos S. Lawless

Advanced space-weather forecasting relies on the ability to accurately predict near-Earth solar wind conditions. For this purpose, physics-based, global numerical models of the solar wind are initialized with photospheric magnetic field and coronagraph observations, but no further observation constraints are imposed between the upper corona and Earth orbit. Data assimilation (DA) of the available in situ solar wind observations into the models could potentially provide additional constraints, improving solar wind reconstructions, and forecasts. However, in order to effectively combine the model and observations, it is necessary to quantify the error introduced by assuming point measurements are representative of the model state. In particular, the range of heliographic latitudes over which in situ solar wind speed measurements are representative is of primary importance, but particularly difficult to assess from observations alone. In this study we use 40+ years of observation-driven solar wind model results to assess two related properties: the latitudinal representivity error introduced by assuming the solar wind speed measured at a given latitude is the same as that at the heliographic equator, and the range of latitudes over which a solar wind measurement should influence the model state, referred to as the observational localisation. These values are quantified for future use in solar wind DA schemes as a function of solar cycle phase, measurement latitude, and error tolerance. In general, we find that in situ solar wind speed measurements near the ecliptic plane at solar minimum are extremely localised, being similar over only 1° or 2° of latitude. In the uniform polar fast wind above approximately 40° latitude at solar minimum, the latitudinal representivity error drops. At solar maximum, the increased variability of the solar wind speed at high latitudes means that the latitudinal representivity error increases at the poles, though becomes greater in the ecliptic, as long as moderate speed errors can be tolerated. The heliospheric magnetic field and solar wind density and temperature show very similar behaviour.


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