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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We examine 10 coronal mass ejections from the in-ecliptic portion of the Ulysses mission. Five of these CMEs are magnetic clouds. In each case we observe an inverse relationship between electron temperature and density. For protons this relationship is less clear. Earlier work has shown a similar inverse relationship for electrons inside magnetic clouds and interpreted it to mean that the polytropic index governing the expansion of electrons is less than unity. This requires electrons to be heated as the CME expands. We offer an alternative view that the inverse relationship between electron temperature and density is caused by more rapid cooling of the denser plasma through collisions. More rapid cooling of denser plasma has been shown for 1 AU measurements in the solar wind. As evidence for this hypothesis we show that the denser plasma inside the CMEs tends to be more isotropic indicating a different history of collisions for the dense plasma. Thus, although the electron temperature inside CMEs consistently shows an inverse correlation with the density, this is not an indication of the polytropic index of the plasma but instead supports the idea of collisional modification of the electrons during their transit from the sun.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 100; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Mean values of a number of parameters of the most powerful coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and interplanetary shocks generated by these ejections are estimated using an analysis of data obtained by the cosmic coronagraphs and spacecrafts, and geomagnetic storm measurements. It was payed attention that the shock mass and mechanical energy, averaging 5 x 10(exp 16) grm and 2 x 10(exp 32) erg respectively, are nearly 10 times larger than corresponding parameters of the ejections. So, the CME energy deficit problem seems to exist really. To solve this problem one can make an assumption that the process of the mass and energy growth of CMEs during their propagation out of the Sun observed in the solar corona is continued in supercorona too up to distances of 10-30 solar radii. This assumption is confirmed by the data analysis of five events observed using zodiacal light photometers of the HELIOS- I and HELIOS-2 spacecrafts. The mass growth rate is estimated to be equal to (1-7) x 10(exp 11) grm/sec. It is concluded that the CME contribution to mass and energy flows in the solar winds probably, is larger enough than the value of 3-5% adopted usually.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 99; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Solar wind proton temperatures lower than expected for 'normal' solar wind expansion are a common signature of 'ejecta' (i.e. interplanetary coronal mass ejections). We have surveyed the OMNI solar wind data base for 1965-1991, and Helios data for 1974-1980, to identify regions of abnormally low temperatures. Their occurrence rate is clearly dependent on solar activity levels, in particular when the minority of events associated with encounters with the heliospheric plasma sheet are excluded. The analysis of the OMNI data may provide an indication of the rate of ejecta at the Earth, and hence of the CME rate, extending back to before spacecraft coronagraph observations became available in the early 1970's. We discuss the association of these solar wind structures with cosmic ray depressions bidirectional particle flows, and other ejecta signatures. Our impression is that no one ejecta signature provides a truly comprehensive indication of the presence of ejecta, but that abnormally low temperature depressions encompass most of the regions identified by these other individual signatures.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 98; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We have been carrying out the interplanetary scintillation observations at a frequency of 327 MHz. The IPS measurements at this frequency can probe the distance range of 0.1-1 AU. We will report on source regions of the low-speed winds which were observed within 0.3 AU by the IPS method. The source regions of low-speed winds have been studied. In 1991, two spacecraft of Sakigake and IMP observed two low-speed streams in one solar rotation, which originated from a magnetic neutral line on the source surface. However speeds are slightly different from each other: one is 300 km/s while the other one is 400 km/s. Similar speed difference was also observed by the IPS method. We examined differences of these source regions in the soft X-ray images observed by the Yohkoh satellite. At the source region of the lower speed wind, sun spots were found under the neutral line, while nothing except the neutral line was found for the higher speed wind. We made a synoptic chart of the solar wind speeds which were observed within 0.3 AU. In this chart, compact regions of very low speed can be found clearly, and the amplitude of a low-speed belt is smaller than that of a magnetic neutral line. Distribution of the low-speed belt is rather suited above active regions than on a neutral line calculated by the potential field model.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 62
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The radial distance dependence of solar wind speeds, which were measured by interplanetary scintillation method, has been studied especially for a high-speed solar wind, and large increase of the IPS speeds (300 km/s) was observed at the distance range of 0.1 - 0.3 AU. When the streams are mapped back onto the source surface, they distribute in polar coronal holes or their boundaries. Since the IPS measurement can be biased by several effects such as of line-of-sight integration, strong scattering and random velocities, we examined these biasing effects and have found difficulty to explain the large IPS speed increase with the biasing effects.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 62
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Two-antenna scintillation (IPS) observations can provide accurate measurements of the velocity with which electron density fluctuations drift past the line of sight. We will present recent IPS measurements made with the EISCAT and VLBA arrays. It is common, particularly during declining activity. for the line of sight to pass through plasma with a wide range of speed. Therefore it is important to account for the line of sight integration. It is clear from ULYSSES measurements that the speed is bimodal in nature, i.e., either 'fast' or 'slow.' Thus it is not necessary to model a continuous velocity distribution - one need only locate the 'fast-slow' interface. In addition one must consider the possibility that the density fluctuations are moving with respect to the flow of particles. Alfven waves propagating through field-aligned density fluctuations can mimic a sound wave in this respect, so the apparent IPS velocity can be the flow speed plus the Alfven speed. In modeling the IPS it is important that the scattering be 'weak,' because the weak scattering model requires only 1 spatial parameter instead of 3. Furthermore the effect of multiple velocities in much more distinct in weak scattering. EISCAT can only operate near 933 MHz, which limits the observations to outside of 17R(solar mass). The VLBA is the only facility with the combination of high frequency operation and long baselines required to observe inside of 15R(solar mass). A simple bimodal model has been successfully used to interpret our IPS observations near the sun. Farther out interaction regions have built up significantly and a two speed model is no longer valid. An apparent deceleration in the fast polar wind is sometimes evident when compared to the ULYSSES observation. The density variance delta N(exp 2)e in the fast wind appears to decrease from equator to pole.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 61; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Recent observations of coronal holes made with the soft X-ray telescope aboard Yohkoh have indicated a temperature of 1.8 approximately 2.1 x 10(exp 6) K and an emission measure of 10(exp 25.7 approximately 26.2) cm (exp -5). This is almost the same as in quiet regions of the Sun. Numerical simulations of the temperature density and velocity structure in a coronal hole. using a parameterized heating distribution have been used for a comparison with the Yohkoh observations. Models are obtained which fit the observed temperature and emission measure. with heating fluxes which are consistent with other measurements. However, the final velocity of the solar wind is very slow which indicates the necessity of another acceleration mechanism such as alfven waves.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 63
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: In the solar corona shock waves generated by flares and/or coronal mass ejections can be observed by radio astronomical methods in terms of solar type 2 radio bursts. In dynamic radio spectra they appear as emission stripes slowly drifting from high to low frequencies. A sample of 25 solar type 2 radio bursts observed in the range of 40 - 170 MHz with a time resolution of 0.1 s by the new radiospectrograph of the Astrophvsikalisches Institut Potsdam in Tremsdorf is statistically investigated concerning their spectral features, i.e, drift rate, instantaneous bandwidth, and fundamental harmonic ratio. In-situ plasma wave measurements at interplanetary shocks provide the assumption that type 2 radio radiation is emitted in the vicinity of the transition region of shock waves. Thus, the instantaneous bandwidth of a solar type 2 radio burst would reflect the density jump across the associated shock wave. Comparing the inspection of the Rankine-Hugoniot relations of shock waves under coronal circumstances with those obtained from the observational study, solar type 2 radio bursts should be regarded to be generated by weak supercritical, quasi-parallel, fast magnetosonic shock waves in the corona.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 63
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A number of theoretical works have suggested that MHD plasma fluctuations in solar winds should play an important role particularly in the acceleration of high speed winds inside or near 0.1 AU from the sun. Since velocity fluctuations in solar winds are expected to be caused by the MHD plasma fluctuations, measurements of the velocity fluctuations give clues to reveal the acceleration process of solar winds. We made interplanetary scintillation (IPS) observations at the region out of 0.1 AU to investigate dependence of velocity fluctuations on flow speeds. For evaluating the velocity fluctuation of a flow, we selected the IPS data-set acquired at 2 separate antennas which located in the projected flow direction onto the baseline plane, and tried to compare skewness of the observed cross correlation function(CCF) with skewness of modeled CCFs in which velocity fluctuations were parametrized. The integration effect of IPS along a ray path was also taken into account in the estimation of modeled CCFs. Although this analysis method is significant to derive only parallel fluctuation components to the flow directions, preliminary analyses show following results: (1) High speed winds (Vsw greater than or equal to 500 km/s out of 0.3 AU) indicate enhancement of velocity fluctuations near 0.1 AU; and (2) Low speed winds (Vsw less than or equal to 400 Km/s out of 0.3 AU) indicate small velocity fluctuations at any distances.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 62
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Interplanetary scintillation observations of the solar wind acceleration region (solar elongation: R approximately 4-30 R(solar mass)) have been performed at the Effelsberg and Pushino telescopes using natural radio sources. The water maser source IRC-20431 was observed at the wavelength lambda = 1.35 cm in a series of nine scintillation experiments performed during the December solar occultations from 1981 to 1994. Dramatic changes in the radial dependence of the scintillation index m(R) were recorded over the course of the 11-year solar cycle. Decidedly reduced scattering, attributed to a pronounced heliolatitude effect, was observed at the closest solar approach distances in the years around solar activity minimum. The anisotropy of the solar scattering region slowly evolves to a spherically symmetric pattern in the years of high solar activity as more intensive scattering returns to the polar latitudes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 61; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We have studied the evolution of the velocity distribution function of a test population of electrons in the solar corona and inner solar wind region, using a recently developed kinetic model. The model solves the time dependent, linear transport equation, with a Fokker-Planck collision operator to describe Coulomb collisions between the 'test population' and a thermal background of charged particles, using a finite differencing scheme. The model provides information on how non-Maxwellian features develop in the distribution function in the transition region from collision dominated to collisionless flow. By taking moments of the distribution the evolution of higher order moments, such as the heat flow, can be studied.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 30; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 12
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The outflow of coronal plasma into interplanetary space is a consequence of the coronal heating process. Therefore the formation of the corona and the acceleration of the solar wind should be treated as a single problem. Traditionally the mass or particle flux emanating from the extended corona has been thought of as being determined by the coronal temperature or scale height and the coronal (base) density. This argument follows from considerations of the momentum balance of the corona-wind system from which one obtains models of a close to hydrostatic corona out to the critical point where the flow becomes supersonic. With this approach to the acceleration of the wind is has been difficult to reconcile the relatively small variation observed in the proton flux at 1 AU with the predicted exponential dependence of the proton flux on the coronal temperature. In this talk we would like to emphasize another approach in which coronal energetics play the primary role. The deposition of energy into the corona through some 'mechanical' energy flux is balanced by the various energy sinks available to the corona and the sum of these processes determine the coronal structure, i.e. its temperature and density. The corona loses energy through heat conduction into the transition region, through radiative losses, and through the gravitational potential energy and kinetic energy put into the solar wind itself. We will show from a series of models of the chromosphere transition region-corona-solar wind system that most of the energy deposited in a magnetically open region will go into the solar wind, with roughly half going into kinetic energy and half into lifting the plasma out of the solar gravity field. The coronal base density will adjust itself in such a way that the heat conductive flux flowing into the transition region is radiated away in the upper chromosphere. The coronal temperature is set by the requirements that most of the deposited energy goes into accelerating the solar wind; the coronal scale height will adjust itself so that the solar wind energy losses conform to the amplitude of the input energy. These processes are modified by the 'mode' of energy deposition, and we will show the effects on coronal structure of changing the parameters describing coronal heating as well as the effects of including a helium fluid in the models. However, the location, scale height and/or form of the energy deposition (i.e. heating or direct acceleration) are not too important for the solar wind, the coronal density and temperature structure will vary with the 'mode' of energy deposition, but the solar wind mass flux depends mainly on the amplitude of the energy flux.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 29; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 13
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Coronal heating is at the origin of the X-ray emission and mass loss from the sun and many other stars. While different scenarios have been proposed to explain the heating of magnetically confined and open regions of the corona, they must all rely on the transfer, storage and dissipation of the abundant energy present in photospheric motions. Here we focus on theories which rely on magnetic fields and electric currents both for the energy transfer and storage in the corona. The dissipation of this energy, whether in the form of reconnection in current sheets (nanoflare?) or the dissipation of MHD waves, depends crucially on the development of extremely small scales in the coronal magnetic field, where kinetic effects are likely to be fundamental. The question of whether coronal heating and flares may be viewed respectively as the macroscopic, low-energy average and the high-energy, temporally intermittent aspect of the same underlying driven, dissipative, turbulent system is also addressed, with emphasis placed on the main observational and theoretical stumbling blocks in the way of a confinement or disproof of such a conjecture.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 28
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: In weakly dissipative media governed by the magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) equations, any efficient mechanism of energy dissipation requires the formation of small scales. The possibility to produce small scales has been studied by Malara et al. in the case of MHD disturbances propagating in an incompressible and inhomogeneous medium, for a strictly 2D geometry. We extend the work of Malara et al. to include both compressibility and the third component for vector quantities. Using numerical simulations we show that, when an Alfven wave propagates in a compressible nonuniform medium, the two dynamical effects responsible for the small scales formation in the incompressible case are still at work: energy pinching and phase-mixing. Moreover, the interaction between the initial Alfven wave and the inhomogeneity gives rise to the formation of compressible perturbations (fast and slow waves or a static entropy wave). Some of these compressive fluctuations are subject to the steepening of the wave front and become shock waves, which are extremely efficient in dissipating their energy, their dissipation being independent of the Reynolds number. A rough estimate of the typical times which the various dynamical processes take to produce small scales and then to dissipate the energy show that these times are consistent with those required to dissipate inside the solar corona the energy of Alfven waves of photospheric origin.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 27; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The National Solar Observatory synoptic program provides an extensive and unique data base of high-resolution full-disk observations of the line-of-sight photospheric magnetic fields and of the He I lambda 10830 equivalent width. These data have been taken nearly daily for more than 21 years since 1974 and provide the opportunity to investigate the behavior of the magnetic fields in the photosphere and those inferred for the corona spanning on the time scales of a day to that of a solar cycle. The intensity of structures observed in He I lambda 10830 are strongly modulated by overlying coronal radiation; areas with low coronal emission are generally brighter in He I lambda 10830, while areas with high coronal emission are darker. For this reason, He I lambda 10830 was selected in the mid-1970's as way to identify and monitor coronal holes, magnetic fields with an open configuration, and the sources of high-speed solar wind streams. The He I lambda 10830 spectroheliograms also show a wide variety of other structures from small-scale, short-lived dark points (less than 30 arc-sec, hours) to the large-scale, long-lived two 'ribbon' flare events that follow the filament eruptions (1000 arc-sec, days). Such structures provide clues about the connections and changes in the large-scale coronal magnetic fields that are rooted in concentrations of magnetic network and active regions in the photosphere. In this paper, what observations of the photospheric magnetic field and He I lambda 10830 can tell us about the short- and long-term evolution of the coronal magnetic fields will be discussed, focussing on the quiet Sun and coronal holes. These data and what we infer from them will be compared with direct observations of the coronal structure from the Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 27; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 16
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The high speed solar wind, which is associated with coronal holes and unipolar interplanetary magnetic field, has now been observed in situ beyond 0.3 a.u. and at latitudes up to 80 degrees. Its important characteristics are that it is remarkably steady in terms of flow properties and composition and that the ions, especially minor species, are favored in terms of heating and acceleration. We have proposed that the high speed wind, with its associated coronal holes, forms the basic mode of solar wind flow. In contrast, the low speed wind is inherently non-stationary, filamentary and not in equilibrium with conditions at the coronal base. It is presumably the result of continual reconfigurations of the force-free magnetic field in the low-latitude closed corona which allow trapped plasma to drain away along transiently open flux tubes. Observations of high speed solar wind close to its source are hampered by the essential heterogeneity of the corona, even at sunspot minimum. In particular it is difficult to determine more than limits to the density, temperature and wave amplitude near the coronal base as a result of contamination from fore- and back-ground plasma. We interpret the observations as indicating that the high speed solar wind originates in the chromospheric network, covering only about 1% of the surface of the sun, where the magnetic field is complex and not unipolar. As a result of small-scale reconnection events in this 'furnace', Alfven waves are generated with a flat spectrum covering the approximate range 10 kHz to 10 Hz. The plasma is likely to be produced as a result of downwards thermal conduction and possibly photoionization at the top of the low density chromospheric interface to the furnace, thus controlling the mass flux in the wind. The immediate source of free (magnetic) energy is in the form of granule-sized loops which are continually carried into the network from the sides. The resulting wave spectrum is such that energy can be efficiently transferred to the ions within a few solar radii of the base of the corona, favoring heavy species and creating stable, fast solar wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 31; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Observations of solar Lyman alpha have been interpreted as indicating that the polar mass flux density is lower than the equatorial average. This led Lallement et al (1986) to make a parametric study of solar wind acceleration, along the lines of earlier the Munro-Jackson study (1977), in which they concluded that uncertainties in the polar mass flux were large enough to be consistent with two extreme opposites: (1) a substantial energy supply beyond classical thermal conduction is required; or (2) classical thermal conduction is adequate to drive the flow. This ambiguity has been clarified by Ulysses observations of the polar outflow (Phillips et al, 1994). The polar mass flux density lies in the middle of the range studies by Lallement et al (1986), which suggests that extended heating is going on out to at least approximately 5 AU. Independent, purely energetic arguments can be made to estimate the required coronal source (electron) temperature that would be required to account for the observed energy flux density. An electron temperature of at least 2 x 10(exp 6) K would be required for the classical conduction flux density to be comparable to the total energy flux density; such a high temperature is thought to be unlikely in a coronal hole. These arguments strongly suggest that some extended heating or momentum transfer mechanism is required to drive the solar wind from the polar coronal hole. A number of mechanisms are discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 30; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The scaling properties of a time series of Doppler images obtained in good visibility conditions are studied. A 28 cm vacuum telescope and a vacuum spectroheliograph in video spectra-spectroheliograph mode, are used. Sixty line-of-sight Doppler images of an area of the quiet sun are investigated. They were taken at 60 sec intervals over a one hour span and have a 2 arcsec resolution. After the removal of the five-minute oscillations, the time-spatial spectrum is calculated. To study the turbulence of photospheric flows, two scaling parameters in the spectra, are estimated: the exponent of the spatial part of the power spectrum, and the exponent governing the scaling of time correlations. The implied diffusive behavior is discussed. This includes the estimation of a diffusion coefficient and the type of diffusion involved.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 249-252
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The nonlocal non-diffusive transport of passive scalars in turbulent magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) convection is investigated using transilient matrices. These matrices describe the probability that a tracer particle beginning at one position in a flow will be advected to another position after some time. A method for the calculation of these matrices from simulation data which involves following the trajectories of passive tracer particles and calculating their transport statistics, is presented. The method is applied to study the transport in several simulations of turbulent, rotating, three dimensional compressible, penetrative MDH convection. Transport coefficients and other diagnostics are used to quantify the transport, which is found to resemble advection more closely than diffusion. Some of the results are found to have direct relevance to other physical problems, such as the light element depletion in sun-type stars. The large kurtosis found for downward moving particles at the base of the convection zone implies several extreme events.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 253-258
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Long uninterrupted sequences of solar magnetograms from the global oscillations network group (GONG) network and from the solar and heliospheric observatory (SOHO) satellite will provide the opportunity to study the proper motions of magnetic features. The possible use of multiscale regularization, a scale-recursive estimation technique which begins with a prior model of how state variables and their statistical properties propagate over scale. Short magnetogram sequences are analyzed with the multiscale regularization algorithm as applied to optical flow. This algorithm is found to be efficient, provides results for all the spatial scales spanned by the data and provides error estimates for the solutions. It is found that the algorithm is less sensitive to evolutionary changes than correlation tracking.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 227-232
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Ulysses has collected data between 1 and 5 AU during, and just following solar maximum, when the heliospheric current sheet (HCS) can be thought of as reaching its maximum tilt and being subject to the maximum amount of turbulence in the solar wind. The Ulysses solar wind plasma instrument measures the vector velocity and can be used to estimate the flow speed and direction in turbulent 'eddies' in the solar wind that are a fraction of an astronomical unit in size and last (have either a turnover or dynamical interaction time of) several hours to more than a day. Here, in a simple exercise, these solar wind eddies at the HCS are characterized using Ulysses data. This character is then used to define a model flow field with eddies that is imposed on an ideal HCS to estimate how the HCS will be deformed by the flow. This model inherently results in the complexity of the HCS increasing with heliocentric distance, but the result is a measure of the degree to which the observed change in complexity is a measure of the importance of solar wind flows in deforming the HCS. By comparison with randomly selected intervals not located on the HCS, it appears that eddies on the HCS are similar to those elsewhere at this time during the solar cycle, as is the resultant deformation of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). The IMF deformation is analogous to what is often termed the 'random walk' of interplanetary magnetic field lines.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A7; p. 12,261-12,273
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Several physical and observational effects contribute to the significant imbalances of magnetic flux that are often observed in active regions. We consider an effect not previously treated: the influence of electric currents in the photosphere. Electric currents can cause a line-of-sight flux imbalance because of the directionality of the magnetic field they produce. Currents associated with magnetic flux tubes produce larger imbalances than do smoothly-varying distributions of flux and current. We estimate the magnitude of this effect for current densities, total currents, and magnetic geometry consistent with observations. The expected imbalances lie approximately in the range 0-15%, depending on the character of the current-carying fields and the angle from which they are viewed. Observationally, current-induced flux imbalances could be indicated by a statistical dependence of the imbalance on angular distance from disk center. A general study of magnetic flux balance in active regions is needed to determine the relative importance of other- probably larger- effects such as dilute flux (too weak to measure or rendered invisible by radiative transfer effects), merging with weak background fields, and long-range connections between active regions.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Solar Physics (ISSN 0038-0938); 157; 1-2; p. 185-197
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  • 23
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A semianalytic method is derived for dealing simultaneously with large numbers of linear stellar oscillation modes trapped in a cavity (a shell) of fluid which is rotating and convecting. A simple generalization of mixing-length theory shows how convection is modulated by weak rotational effects and by the horizontal wind fields of linear r-mode oscillations. The modulated convection is then used to compute the energy lost to turbulent viscosity by a family of nondegenerate oscillations. Viscosity terms of fourth degree in the wind shear can be included if they are a perturbation affecting only a small portion of the r-mode. Viscous energy loss strenghthens convection in a narrow layer near the base of the H and He ionization zone. In the Sun, this layer is about 7 Mm thick and centered at 0.932 of a solar radius where convection cells have a typical size of about 20 Mm and a lifetime of 0.3 Ms, both similar to what is observed in supergranules. If the rms velocity of r-modes at the surface exceeds 5 m/s, then energy is deposited inside the Sun at a sufficient rate to power the supergranulation and impose on it a weak latitude dependence.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X); 443; 1; p. 423-433
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We present observational evidence that eruptions of quiescent filaments and associated coronal mass ejections (CMEs) occur as a consequence of the destabilization of large-scale coronal arcades due to interactions between these structures and new and growing active regions. Both statistical and case studies have been carried out. In a case study of a 'bulge' observed by the High-Altitude Observatory Solar Maximum Mission coronagraph, the high-resolution magnetograms from the Big Bear Solar Observatory show newly emerging and rapidly changing flux in the magnetic fields that apparently underlie the bugle. For other case studies and in the statistical work the eruption of major quiescent filaments was taken as a proxy for CME eruption. We have found that two thirds of the quiescent-filament-associated CMEs occurred after substantial amounts of new magnetic flux emerged in the vicinity of the filament. In addition, in a study of all major quiescent filaments and active regions appearing in a 2-month period we found that 17 of the 22 filaments that were associated with new active regions erupted and 26 of the 31 filaments that were not associated with new flux did not erupt. In all cases in which the new flux was oriented favorably for reconnection with the preexisting large-scale coronal arcades; the filament was observed to erupt. The appearance of the new flux in the form of new active regions begins a few days before the eruption and typically is still occurring at the time of the eruption. A CME initiation scenario taking account of these observational results is proposed.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A3; p. 3355-3367
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Total solar irradiance measurements from the 1984-1993 Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS) active cavity radiometer and 1978-1993 Nimbus 7 transfer cavity radiometer spacecraft experiments are analyzed to detect the presence of 11-, 22-, and 80-year irradiance variability components. The analyses confirmed the existence of a significant 11-year irradiance variability component, associated with solar magnetic activity and the sunspot cycle. The analyses also suggest the presence of a 22- or 80-year variability component. The earlier Nimbus 7 and Solar Maximum Mission (SMM) spacecraft irradiance measurements decreased approximately 1.2 and 1.3 W/sq m, respectively, between 1980 and 1986. The Nimbus 7 values increased 1.2 W/sq m between 1986 and 1989. The ERBS irradiance measurements increased 1.3 W/sq m during 1986-1989, and then decreased 0.4 W/sq m (at an annual rate of 0.14 W/sq. m/yr) during 1990-1993. Considering the correlations between ERBS, Nimbus 7, and SMM irradiance trends and solar magnetic activity, the total solar irradiance should decrease to minimum levels by 1997 as solar activity decreases to minimum levels, and then increase to maximum levels by the year 2000 as solar activity rises. The ERBS measurements yielded 165.4 +/- 0.7 W/sq m as the mean irradiance value with measurement accuracies and precisions of 0.2% and 0.02%, respectively. The ERBS mean irradiance value is within 0.2% of the 1367.4, 1365.9, and 1366.9 W/sq m mean values for the SMM, Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS), and Space Shuttle Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science (ATLAS 1) Solar Constant (SOLCON) active cavity radiometer spacecraft experiments, respectively. The Nimbus 7 measurements yielded 1372.1 W/sq m as the mean value with a measurement accuracy of 0.5%. Empirical irradiance model fits, based upon 10.7 -cm solar radio flux (F10) and photometric sunspot index (PSI), were used to assess the quality of the ERBS, Numbus 7, SMM, and the UARS irradiance data sets and to identify irradiance variability trends which may be caused by drifts or shifts in the spacecraft sensor responses. Comparisons among the fits and measured irradiances indicate that the Nimbus 7 radiometer response shifted by a total of 0.8 W/sq m between September 1989 and April 1990 and that the ERBS and UARS radiometers each drifted approximately 0.5 W/sq m during the first 5 months in orbit.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A2; p. 1667-1675
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  • 26
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Different types of nonlinear shock wave interactions in some regions of the solar wind flow are considered. It is shown, that the solar flare or nonflare CME fast shock wave may disappear as the result of the collision with the rotational discontinuity. By the way the appearance of the slow shock waves as the consequence of the collision with other directional discontinuity namely tangential is indicated. Thus the nonlinear oblique and normal MHD shock waves interactions with different solar wind discontinuities (tangential, rotational, contact, shock and plasmoidal) both in the free flow and close to the gradient regions like the terrestrial magnetopause and the heliopause are described. The change of the plasma pressure across the solar wind fast shock waves is also evaluated. The sketch of the classification of the MHD discontinuities interactions, connected with the solar wind evolution is given.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 101; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A fundamental problem in Solar-Terrestrial Physics is the origin of the solar transient plasma output, which includes the coronal mass ejection and its interplanetary manifestation, e.g. the magnetic cloud. The traditional blast wave model resulted from solar thermal pressure impulse has faced with challenge during recent years. In the MHD numerical simulation study of CME, the authors find that the basic feature of the asymmetrical event on 18 August 1980 can be reproduced neither by a thermal pressure nor by a speed increment. Also, the thermal pressure model fails in simulating the interplanetary structure with low thermal pressure and strong magnetic field strength, representative of a typical magnetic cloud. Instead, the numerical simulation results are in favor of the magnetic field expansion as the likely mechanism for both the asymmetrical CME event and magnetic cloud.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 100; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Coronal holes are the sources of the solar wind and, according to recent YOKOH observations, may undergo rapid changes which are associated with manifestations of explosive solar activity. Rapid changes in a hole's structure will produce rapid changes in the characteristics of the wind emerging from it and, in the particular c se of a sudden increase in wind velocity, this may lead to the formation of an interplanetary shock. We discuss the characteristics of shocks formed in such a way and compare them with interplanetary observations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 99; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Ulysses observations have revealed a new class of forward-reverse shock pairs in the solar wind that appears to be restricted to high heliographic latitudes. Shock pairs in this new class of events are produced by over-expansion (i.e., expansion driven by a high internal pressure) of coronal mass ejections, CMEs, that have speeds comparable to that of the surrounding solar wind plasma. Here we compare low- and high-latitude observations of an event observed both near Earth by IMP 8 and at high latitudes by Ulysses. At the time of these observations Ulysses was at 3.53 AU and was situated 47.2 deg south and 11.4 deg west of Earth (in the sense of planetary motion about the Sun). A fast CME that departed from the Sun on February 20, 1994 produced both a major (forward) shock wave disturbance in the ecliptic plane at 1 AU (and a large geomagnetic storm) and a forward reverse shock pair associated with over-expansion of the CME at high heliographic latitudes. The combined measurements provide a graphic illustration of how the same fast CME can produce totally different types of disturbances at low and high latitudes. Differences in the disturbances generated by the CME at high and low latitudes are due primarily to the different speeds initially prevailing in the ambient solar wind ahead of it. These observations are consistent with the results of simple numerical simulations of the event.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 98; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Masses have now been determined for many of the CMEs observed in the inner heliosphere by the HELIOS 1 and 2 zodiacal light photometers. The speed of the brightest material of each CME has also been measured so that, for events having both mass and speed determinations, the kinetic energies of the CMEs are estimated. We compare the masses and kinetic energies of the individual CMEs measured in the inner heliosphere by HELIOS and near the Sun from observations by the SOLWIND (1979-1983) and SMM coronagraphs (1980). Where feasible we also compare the speeds of the same CMEs. We find that the HELIOS masses and energies tend to be somewhat larger by factors of 2-5 than those derived from the coronagraph data. We also compare the distribution of the masses and energies of the HELIOS and coronagraph CMEs over the solar cycle. These results provide an important baseline for observations of CMEs from coronagraphs, from the ISEE-3/ICE, WIND and Ulysses spacecraft and in the future from SOHO.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 97; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A large number of magnetic holes have been found in the Ulysses data during its cruise in the ecliptic. They are interpreted as convecting structures, probably caused by the mirror instability which exists in high beta plasmas with anisotropic temperatures. The characteristics of the holes reflect the solar wind condition of the region in which the holes are formed, and the point of observation may be far removed from where the instability occurs. A preliminary survey appears to indicate that the number of holes has no significant radial dependence. However, the number of holes does appear to increase with increasing heliographic latitude. Yet the large scale solar wind structures with their compression regions disappeared at approximately 57 deg south latitude. Thus any causal relationship between the holes and large scale solar wind structures is questionable. The temperature anisotropy and high beta required by the mirror instability must be generated by other mechanisms. In order to tie the magnetic holes and the mirror instability to their cause, the evolution of their characteristics with heliocentric distance and latitude needs to be investigated. With the progression of Ulysses around the sun a survey will be conducted to ascertain the characteristics of the magnetic holes as a function of heliographic latitude and heliocentric distance. A comparison of the results with the solar wind conditions may lead to the identification of the magnetic hole generating mechanism(s).
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 76; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The solar corona was observed with an externally occulted White Light Coronagraph (WLC) carried on the SPARTAN 201-1 spacecraft on 11-12 Apr. 1993. With observations from WLC and the ground based Mauna Loa White Light Coronagraph, a large number of polar plumes both in the north and south polar holes were traced from 1.16 to 5.5 Rs. Flow properties of the solar wind in coronal holes have been determined (Habbal et al., 1995) by using a two fluid model constrained by density profiles and scale height temperatures from the white light observations, and interplanetary measurements of the flow speed and proton mass flux from Ulysses' south polar passage. Provisions for acceleration by Alfven waves, as well as electron and proton heating, are included in the momentum and the energy equations respectively. The model computations fit remarkably well the empirical constraints of the two different density structures (plumes and coronal holes) for a range of input parameters. In this study we investigate the physical nature of the heating function used in the two-fluid model. Alfven waves have been suggested as the possible source of heating that accelerates the solar wind (Ofman and Davila, 1995). We utilize the density contrast observed in WLC data in the plume and ambient coronal hole region to estimate the Alfven wave frequencies responsible for heating these structures. The source heating function utilized in the two fluid model of the solar wind acceleration will be compared with the resonant Alfven wave heating function.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 64
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We have been comparing measurements of solar wind speed at the Ulysses spacecraft with coronal flux-tube expansion rates, derived from photospheric field measurements using a current-free coronal model. The large-scale patterns of derived speed have continued to reproduce the observed patterns from launch through south polar passage to the present 40S latitude of the spacecraft. The fastest non-transient wind speeds of approx. 860 km/s were encountered at midlatitudes en route to the south pole, rather than during polar passage when the peak speeds were approx. 820 km/s. Although this result is in qualitative agreement with the idea that the wind speed is controlled by the coronal flux-tube expansion rate, the 40 km/s difference is significantly smaller than the 100-150 km/s difference based on our in-ecliptic calibration. This paper will summarize our attempts to resolve this discrepancy and will show the observational status of our coronal/interplanetary comparison at the time of the meeting.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 63
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The Yohkoh/SXT images provide full-disk coverage of the solar corona, usually extending before and after one of the large-scale eruptive events that occur in the polar crown These produce large arcades of X-ray loops, often with a cusp-shaped coronal extension, and are known to be associated with coronal mass ejections. The Yohkoh prototype of such events occurred 12 Nov. 1991. This allows us to determine heights from the apparent rotation rates of these structures. In comparison v with magnetic-field extrapolations from Wilcox Solar Observatory. use use this tool to infer the three dimensional structure of the corona in particular cases: 24 Jan. 1992, 24 Feb. 1993, 14 Apr. 1994, and 13 Nov. 1994. The last event is a long-duration flare event.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 63
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The single-station measurements of interplanetary scintillation (IPS) at 2 and 8 GHz have been made at the Kashima Space Research Center of the Communications Research Laboratory in the period from 1990 to 1994. These IPS data are used to study the radial distribution of solar wind velocity and density fluctuations near the sun (i.e. 10-70 Rs), and the long-term variation in these properties. The IPS co-spectrum technique is applied here to estimate the solar wind velocity. Derived velocities show that the solar wind gains a speed significantly in the radial range from 10 to 30 Rs (solar radii). which is much farther than the source surface of the thermally driven solar wind model. From the scintillation index analysis. it is found that the radial fall of density fluctuations is well described by the power-law function. A series of IPS observations reveals that a pronounced change in velocity and turbulence level for this radial range occurs at the polar region of the sun during 1990-1994. That is, the high speed wind and the reduced turbulence region develop there as the solar activity declines. On the other hand, little long-term variation is observed for the solar wind acceleration region at a low latitude. From the comparison with He 1O83 nm observations. it is demonstrated that the change of the solar wind structure is closely linked with the evolution of the coronal hole on the solar surface.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 62
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Results of the close-to-Sun plasmas sounding at the transonic region of the solar wind, where the sub-to supersonic flow transition proceeds (at 10 to 40 solar radii from the Sun), are presented. Natural sources of two types were used, water vapour maser sources at 1.35 cm and guasars at 2.9 m wavelength. scattering observations cover the period of 1986 to 1993, Russian Academy of Sciences telescopes RT-22 and DCR-1000 were used, IPS index and scattering angle being the immediate results of observations. Extensive studies of the scintillation index and scattering angle radial profiles reveal a remarkable structural detail, 'transonic region forrunner'-narrow region of diminished scattering close to the internal border of the extended transonic region with its characteristic enhanced scattering. Comparisons of the scattering and plasma velocity profiles let it possible to determine the critical point positions by the comparatively simple scattering observations. This new possibility widely improves the process of the basic data accumulation in the fundamental problem of the solar wind acceleration mechanism.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 61
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Helioseismology began in earnest in the mid 1970's. In the two decades which have elapsed since that time this branch of solar physics has become a mature field of research. Helioseismology has demonstrated that the solar convection zone is about twice as deep as was generally thought to be the case before 1977. Helioseismology has also provided measurements of the solar internal angular velocity over much of the sun's interior. Helioseismology has also ruled out models which would solve the solar neutrino problem by a lowering of the temperature of the core. Recently, some of the seismic properties of the sun have been demonstrated to vary with changing levels of solar activity. Also, helioseismology has recently provided evidence for helical flow patterns in the shallow, sub-photosphere layers. The techniques of helioseismology are also expanding to include seismic probes of solar active regions. Some work is also being conducted into the possible contributions of the solar acoustic models to the heating of the solar atmosphere. In this talk I will highlight a few of the above results and concentrate on current areas of research in the field.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 27; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Compressible MHD simulations in one dimension with three-dimensional vectors are used to investigate a number of processes relevant to problems in interplanetary physics. The simulations indicate that a large-amplitude nonequilibrium (e.g., linearly polarized) Alfvenic wave, which always starts with small relative fluctuations in the magnitude B of the magnetic field, typically evolves to flatten the magnetic profile in most regions. Under a wide variety of conditions B and the density rho become anticorrelated on average. If the mean magnetic field is allowed to decrease in time, the point where the transverse magnetic fluctuation amplitude delta B(sub T) is greater than the mean field B(sub 0) is not special, and large values of delta B(sub T)/B(sub 0) do not cause the compressive thermal energy to increase remarkably or the wave energy to dissipate at an unusually high rate. Nor does the 'backscatter' of the waves that occurs when the sound speed is less than the Alfven speed result, in itself, in substantial energy dissipation, but rather primarily in a phase change between the magnetic and velocity fields. For isolated wave packets the backscatter does not occur for any of the parameters examined; an initial radiation of acoustic waves away from the packet establishes a stable traveling structure. Thus these simulations, although greatly idealized compared to reality, suggest a picture in which the interplanetary fluctuations should have small deltaB and increasingly quasi-pressure balanced compressive fluctuations, as observed, and in which the dissipation and 'saturation' at delta B(sub T)/B(sub 0) approximately = 1 required by some theories of wave acceleration of the solar wind do not occur. The simulations also provide simple ways to understand the processes of nonlinear steepening and backscattering of Alfven waves and demonstrate the existence of previously unreported types of quasi-steady MHD states.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A3; p. 3405-3415
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The traditionally measured electric fields in the solar wind plasma (about 1-10 mV/m) are not the natural, primordial ones but are the result of plasma-vehicle interaction. The theory of this interaction is not complete now and current interpretation of the measurements can fail. The state of fully ionized plasma depends on the entropy of the creating source and on the process in which plasma is involved. The increasing twofold of a moving volume in the solar wind (with energy transfer across its surface which is comparable with its whole internal energy) is a more rapid process than the relaxation for the pressure. The presumptive source of the solar wind creation - the induction electric field of the solar origin - has very low entropy. The state of plasma must be very far from the state of thermodynamic equilibrium. The internal energy of plasma can be contained mainly in plasma waves, resonant plasma oscillations, and electric currents. The primordial microscopic oscillating electric fields could be about 1 V/m. It can be checked by special measurements, not ruining the natural plasma state. The tool should be a dielectrical microelectroscope outside the distortion zone of the spacecraft, having been observed from the latter.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 75; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Using the empirical constraints provided by observations in the inner corona and in interplanetary space. we derive the flow properties of the solar wind using a two fluid model. Density and scale height temperatures are derived from White Light coronagraph observations on SPARTAN 201-1 and at Mauna Loa, from 1.16 to 5.5 R, in the two polar coronal holes on 11-12 Apr. 1993. Interplanetary measurements of the flow speed and proton mass flux are taken from the Ulysses south polar passage. By comparing the results of the model computations that fit the empirical constraints in the two coronal hole regions, we show how the effects of the line of sight influence the empirical inferences and subsequently the corresponding numerical results.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 64
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  • 41
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Weak (discontinuous) solutions of the 3-D MHD equations look like a promising tool to model the transonic solar wind with structural elements: current sheets, coronal plumes etc. Using the observational information about various coronal emissions one can include these structural elements into the 3-D MHD solar wind model by embedding the discontinuities of given type. Such 3-D MHD structured solar wind is calculated self-consistently: variants are examined via numerical experiments. In particular, the behavior of coronal plumes in the transonic solar wind flow, is modeled. The input information for numerical modeling (for example, the magnetic field map at the very base of the solar corona) can be adjusted so that fast stream arises over the center of the coronal hole, over the coronal hole boundaries and, even, over the region with closed magnetic topology. 3-D MHD equations have the analytical solution which can serve as a model of supersonic trans-alfvenic solar wind in the (5-20) solar radii heliocentric distance interval. The transverse, nonradial total (gas + magnetic field) pressure balance in the flow is the corner-stone of this solution. The solution describes the filamentation (ray-like structure of the solar corona) and streaming (formation of high-speed streams with velocities up to 800 km/sec) as a consequence of the magnetic field spatial inhomogeneous structure and trans-alfvenic character of the flow. The magnetic field works in the model as a 'controller' for the solar wind streaming and filamentation.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 65
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The solar wind is not an isotropic medium; two symmetry axis are provided, first the radial direction (because the mean wind is radial) and second the spiral direction of the mean magnetic field, which depends on heliocentric distance. Observations show very different anisotropy directions, depending on the frequency waveband; while the large-scale velocity fluctuations are essentially radial, the smaller scale magnetic field fluctuations are mostly perpendicular to the mean field direction, which is not the expected linear (WkB) result. We attempt to explain how these properties are related, with the help of numerical simulations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 76; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: One of the striking results of the Sun's south polar pass by Ulysses was the discovery of large amplitude, long period Alfvenic fluctuations that were continuously present in the solar wind flow from the polar coronal hole. The fluctuations dominate the variances and power spectra at periods greater than or equal to 1 hour and are evident as correlated fluctuations in the magnetic field and solar wind velocity components. Various properties of the fluctuations in the magnetic field, in the velocity, and in the electric field have been established. The waves appear to have important implications for galactic cosmic rays and for the solar wind, topics which have continued to be investigated. Their origin is also under study, specifically whether or not they represent motions of the ends of the field lines at the Sun. The resolution of these issues has benefited from the more recent observations as the spacecraft traveled northward toward the ecliptic and passed into the northern solar hemisphere. All these observations will be presented and their implications will be discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 76; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The electron temperature is a fundamental physical parameter of the coronal plasma. Currently, there are no direct measurements of this quantity in the extended corona. Observations with the Ultraviolet Coronagraph Spectrometer (UVCS) aboard the upcoming Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission can provide the most direct determination of the electron kinetic temperature (or, more precisely, the electron velocity distribution along the line of sight). This measurement is based on the observation of the Thomson-scattered Lyman alpha (Ly-alpha) profile. This observation is made particularly challenging by the fact that the integrated intensity of the electron-scattered Ly-alpha line is about 10(exp 3) times fainter than that of the resonantly-scattered Ly-alpha component. In addition, the former is distributed across 50 A (FWHM), unlike the latter that is concentrated in 1 A. These facts impose stringent requirements on the stray-light rejection properties of the coronagraph/spectrometer, and in particular on the requirements for the grating. We make use of laboratory measurements of the UVCS Ly-alpha grating stray-light, and of simulated electron-scattered Ly-alpha profiles to estimate the expected confidence levels of electron temperature determination. Models of different structures typical of the corona (e.g., streamers, coronal holes) are used for this parameter study.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 68; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The magnetic field plays a major role in the physics of the solar corona. However, there are no direct measurements of this physical parameter. We describe a method that can provide the most direct determination of the vector magnetic field in the extended corona (i.e., at heliocentric heights between 1.2 R(solar radius) and 2.0 R(solar radius)). The method is based on polarimetric observations of UV lines of the Lyman series, that is, Lyman alpha (Ly-alpha), lambda 1216 A, Lyman beta (Ly-beta), lambda 1025 A, and Lyman gamma (Ly-gamma), lambda 972 A. These lines have a collisional and a resonantly scattered component. Linear polarization is induced in the resonant component by the anisotropy in the chromospheric radiation field that illuminates the corona. Magnetic fields can be suitably determined through the effects that they induce on this resonance polarization (Hanle effect). The Hanle effect of the Ly-alpha is sensitive to field strengths in the 10 - 100 gauss range. The resonance polarization of Ly-beta and Ly-gamma is sensitive, through the Hanle effect, to fields with strengths between 3 - 30 gauss, and 0.3 - 6 gauss, respectively. We describe a new method for separating the resonant from the collisional component of the Ly-beta and Ly-gamma; the method is based on the approximation, valid within 10%, that the collisional component of the Ly-alpha is negligible, in typical coronal conditions. From the intensity and the polarization of the resonant components of these Lyman lines, the strength and direction of coronal fields can be determined. We model the sensitivity of Hanle-effect diagnostics for different coronal structures (e.g., coronal holes and loops).
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 68; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: MHD equations are considered for the solar atmosphere. 15 different simplest MHD regimes are indicated for the momentum transport equation depending on the mutual binary interplay between 6 possible and locally dominant terms: non-stationarity and inhomogeneity of the flow, gas pressure, magnetic tensions, viscous and gravity forces. These regimes are delimited by five physically independent dimensionless parameters, for example, Strouhal, sonic Mach, alfvenic Mach, Reynolds and Froude numbers or their combinations. Another partially overlapping classification of the simplest regimes may be introduced based on the energy conservation equation. There are also 15 independent binary combinations between nonstationary and inhomogeneous convective terms, dissipative energy sinks and sources (viscous, heat-conductive, Joule and radiative ones) in the energy equation. More complicated regimes are considered with multiple dominated terms. All these MHD regimes play their important role somewhere in the solar atmosphere complicated by the tensor transport coefficients in the magnetically dominated regions of the upper atmosphere. Nearly sonic and transsonic nonstationary convective motions with ascending and descending flows are observed in the solar chromosphere. the transition region and the lower pans of the solar corona together with related horizontal velocity components. This convection represents a kind of the 'cocoonery' manufacturing nonstationary vortices generated here and partially connected to the photosphere and to the solar wind. The solar wind originates from this powerful transsonic muddle in the solar atmosphere as a tiny fraction of the streamlines which are temporarily getting detached from the 'cocoons; and going to the infinity. The topologically complicated instantaneous 'runaway surface' around the Sun, i.e., the surface which separates outgoing to the infinity streams from other finite flows in the solar atmosphere was not described in the literature and needs additional investigation. We conclude that a simple one-connected smooth and quasistationary 'critical surface' which is often supposed to be placed somewhere in the solar corona (say, at 4 solar radii) in reality does not exist. Observational and theoretical arguments favor instead of this a highly structured, disordered, patched and time-dependent sonic transition surface in the solar atmosphere permanently fluctuating at positional dependent heights starting sometimes from photospheric (and maybe subphotospheric) levels and more frequently from the chromosphenc network up to several solar radii in the solar corona.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 67; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Coronal hole regions are well known sources of high-speed solar wind, however to account for the observed properties of the solar wind a source of momentum and heat must be included. Alfven waves were suggested as the possible source of heating that accelerates the solar wind. We investigate the propagation of the Alfven waves in coronal holes via numerical solution of the linearized 2-D resistive MHD equations in slab geometry. The Alfven waves are driven at the lower boundary of the coronal hole and propagate into the corona. The waves are reflected at the coronal hole boundary and part of the wave energy leaks out of the coronal hole. We compare the calculated wavelengths and the attenuation rate of the fast mode Alfven waves in the leaky waveguide formed by the coronal hole with the analytical ideal MHD solutions. The formation of resonance heating layers is found to occur when shear Alfven waves propagate in an inhomogeneous coronal hole. The heating is enhanced when fast mode waves couple to the shear Alfven waves. The narrow heating layers are formed near the location of the ideal resonance, which might occur near the coronal hole boundary for a nearly constant density coronal hole, surrounded by a higher density plasma. We investigate the dependence of the heating on the driver frequency, the Lundquist number, and on the heliocentric distance. and find that the low frequency Alfven waves can be an efficient source of heating at large distances from the Sun. We discuss the relation of our results to the observed properties of high-speed solar wind and coronal holes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 66
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We report results from a dynamic approach to equilibrium for a three fluid solar-wind model in spherical 1D. We advance the mass, momentum and energy transport equations for protons, alpha particles and electrons, with full interspecies coulomb coupling and the simplifications recommended by Burgi (1992). They include no ion heat conduction and an ambipolar electric field in place of the negligible electron momentum coupling. At the inner boundary (the solar surface) we specify the inflow velocity, mass flux, and temperature for each species, and at the outer boundary at large radius we allow the fluids to flow freely from the computational domain. Starting from an initial wind model (e.g.. single fluid) we evolve to a three-fluid steady state. We will describe comparisons with Burgi's static equilibrium results. and examine the stability of the discontinuities which appear in his derived parameter variations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 64
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We present a study of a three-fluid solar wind model. with continuity, momentum and separate energy equations for protons. alpha particles and electrons. Allowing separate coronal heat sources for all three species, we study the flow properties of the solar wind as a function of heat input, Alfven wave energy input, and alpha particle abundance.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 64
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Petschek's 're-connection' model, aspiring to be universal, treated as a boundary problem meets unresolvable difficulties connected with impossibility to specify correctly boundary and initial conditions. This problem was incorrectly formulated. Hence, ineradicable logarithmic singularities occurred on the boundary surfaces. Attempts to eliminate them by incorporating the finite electrical conductivity are incorrect. This should lead to the change in the equation type, boundary condition type and in consequence to the change in solutions. Besides, the slow mode shocks cannot be driven by small internal source. As an alternative a new plasma concept is suggested. The state of fully ionized plasma in space depends completely on the entropy of the plasma heating source and on the process in which plasma is involved. The presumptive source of the solar wind creation - the induction electric field of the solar origin - has very low entropy. The state of plasma should be very far from the thermodynamic equilibrium. Debye's screening is not complete. The excitation of the powerful resonant self-consistent electric fields in plasma provides low electric conductivity. The MHD problems should be treated in frameworks of dissipative theories.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 67; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A nonlinear, time-dependent, ideal MHD code has been developed and used to compute the flow induced by nonlinear Alfven waves propagating in an isothermal, stratified, plane-parallel atmosphere. The code is based on characteristic equations solved in a Lagrangian frame and is highly accurate. Results show that resonance behavior of Alfven waves exists in the presence of a continuous density gradient and that the waves with periods corresponding to resonant peaks exert considerably more force on the medium than off-resonance periods; this leads to enhanced flow. If only off-peak periods are considered, the relationship between the wave period and induced longitudinal velocity shows that short period WKB waves push more on the background medium than longer period, non-WKB, waves. The results also show the development of the longitudinal waves produced by the finite amplitude of the Alfven waves. The longitudinal wave becomes strong as the Alfven wave relative amplitude grows above 10 percent and will lead to strong damping of the Alfven waves.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 66; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The calculation of the solar rotation electro-dynamical effects in the near-the-Sun solar wind seems more convenient from the non-inertial corotating reference frame. This implies some modification of the 3-D MHD equations generally on the base of the General Theory of Relativity. The paper deals with the search of stationary (in corotating non-inertial reference frame) solutions of the modified 3-D MHD equations for the in near-the-Sun high latitude sub-alfvenic solar wind. The solution is obtained requiring electric fields and field-aligned electric currents in the high latitude near-the-Sun solar wind. Various scenario are explored self-consistently via a number of numerical experiments. The analogy with the high latitude Earth's magnetosphere is used for the interpretation of the results. Possible observational manifestations are discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 65
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  • 53
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A fully three-dimensional solar wind model that incorporates momentum and heat addition from Alfven waves is developed. The proposed model upgrades the previous one by considering self-consistently the total system consisting of Alfven waves propagating outward from the Sun and the mean polytropic solar wind flow. The simulation region extends from the coronal base (1 R(sub s) out to beyond 1 AU. The fully 3-D MHD equations written in spherical coordinates are solved in the frame of reference corotating with the Sun. At the inner boundary, the photospheric magnetic field observations are taken as boundary condition and wave energy influx is prescribed to be proportional to the magnetic field strength. The results of the model application for several time intervals are presented.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 65
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  • 54
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Anomalous cosmic rays (ACRs) are interstellar neutrals that drift into the heliosphere, become singly ionized, and are convected to the termination shock of the solar wind, where they are thought to be accelerated to hundreds of MeV. Because their effective origin is at the termination shock, studies of their gradients and spectral shape can reveal important clues about the shock's location, its strength, and the source flux of ACRs. Recently, such studies have predicted that one or more of the Voyager and Pioneer spacecraft may cross the termination shock in the next few years. In addition, there have been studies of galactic cosmic rays that shed new light on the location of the modulation boundary of these particles, which may be the heliopause region. In this talk, we will review these observations and the information they provide about the boundaries of the heliosphere.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 51
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The solar corona, modelled by a low beta, resistive plasma slab, sustains MHD wave propagations due to shearing footpoint motions in the photosphere. By using a numerical algorithm the excitation and nonlinear development of MHD waves in twisted coronal loops are studied. The plasma responds to the footpoint motion by sausage waves if there is no twist. The twist in the magnetic field of the loop destroys initially developed sausage-like wave modes and they become kinks. The transition from sausage to kink modes is analyzed. The twist brings about mode degradation producing high harmonics and this generates more complex fine structures. This can be attributed to several local extrema in the perturbed velocity profiles. The Alfven wave produces remnants of the ideal 1/x singularity both for zero and non-zero twist and this pseudo-singularity becomes less pronounced for larger twist. The effect of nonlinearity is clearly observed by changing the amplitude of the driver by one order of magnitude. The magnetosonic waves also exhibit smoothed remnants of ideal logarithmic singularities when the frequency of the driver is correctly chosen. This pseudo-singularity for fast waves is absent when the coronal loop does not undergo any twist but becomes pronounced when twist is included. On the contrary, it is observed for slow waves even if there is no twist. Increasing the twist leads to a higher heating rate of the loop. The larger twist shifts somewhat uniformly distributed heating to layers inside the slab corresponding to peaks in the magnetic field strength.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 28
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Faraday rotation (FR) measurements using linearly polarized radio signals from the two Helios spacecraft were carried out during the period from 1975 to 1984. This paper presents the results of a spectral analysis of the Helios S-band FR fluctuations observed at heliocentric distances from 2.6 to 15 solar radii during the superior conjunctions 1975-1983. The mean intensity of the FR fluctuations does not exceed the noise level for solar offsets greater than ca. 15 solar radii. The rms FR fluctuation amplitude increases rapidly as the radio ray path approaches the Sun, varying according to a power law (exponent: 2.85 +/- 0.15) at solar distances 4-12 solar radii. At distances inside 4 solar radii the increase is even steeper (exponent: 5.6 +/- 0.2). The equivalent two-dimensional FR fluctuation spectrum is well modeled by a single power-law over the frequency range from 5 to 50 mHz. For heliocentric distances larger than 4 solar radii the spectral index varies between 1.1 and 1.6 with a mean value of 1.4 +/- 0.2, corresponding to a 3-D spectral index p = 2.4. FR fluctuations thus display a somwhat lower spectral index compared with phase and amplitude fluctuations. Surprisingly high values of the spectral index were found for measurements inside 4 solar radii (p = 2.9 +/- 0.2). This may arise from the increasingly dominant effect of the magnetic field on radio wave propagation at small solar offsets. Finally, a quasiperiodic component, believed to be associated with Alfven waves, was discovered in some (but not all!) fluctuation spectra observed simultaneously at two ground stations. Characteristic periods and bulk velocities of this component were 240 +/- 30 sec and 300 +/- 60 km/s, respectively.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 29; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Filamentary magnetic fields and intermittent mass flows with highly variant physical parameters as observed in coronal holes provide, from a theoretical point of view, natural conditions for strongly nonlinear dynamics. The presence of sheared mass flows along fine scale magnetic structures results in strong nonlinear instability, most important of which is the explosive instability. We specify the physical conditions for several different manifestations of the onset of explosive instability and its further evolution: (1) fully developed explosive instability - explosive release of the energy; (2) shock formation - stabilization of instability by small scale spatial inhomogeneities leads to formation of subsequent shocks having a number of peculiarities that is determined by the interplay of thermal and viscous losses (for example, in predominance of thermal losses the isothermal jump occurs); and (3) solitary waves - stabilization of explosive instability by nonlinear dispersion effect leads to formation of a 'gas' of solitons which are later either damped away with characteristic time and energy input or evolve to solitons with explosively growing amplitudes. Each scenario is completely determined by the physical parameters of the medium, thus producing a quite uneven distribution of energy in a coronal hole and, respectively, an uneven outward propagation of the energy flux.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 27
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  • 58
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) aboard Yohkoh has revealed that the solar corona is much more dynamic that had been thought. Among various newly discovered dynamic phenomena, one of the most surprising findings is the discovery of coronal x-ray jets. The length of these jets is a few 10(exp 3) - a few 10(exp 5) km, their (apparent) velocity is a few 10 - a few 100 km/s (some reached 1000 km/s), and the corresponding kinetic energy is estimated to be 10(exp 25) - 10(exp 28) erg. They occur in association with small flares in active regions, emerging flux regions, and x-ray bright points, and show the following common characteristics: recurrency, whip-like motion, change in morphology at the footpoint ARs, and often converging (or inverted-Y) shape. Large scale loop brightenings observed by SXT seem to correspond to jets occurring in closed loop systems. These observations suggest that the magnetic reconnection between the emerging magnetic flux (or expanding loop) and the overlying coronal/chromospheric magnetic field is a key physical process for producing these jets. We shall summarize characteristics of these coronal X-ray jets observed by SXT, and also discuss the theoretical interpretation of them, especially in the framework of a magnetic reconnection model.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 28
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  • 59
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Frequency shifts of high frequency p-modes during the solar cycle are calculated for a non-magnetic polytrope convection zone model. An isothermal chromospheric atmosphere threaded by a uniform horizontal magnetic field is correlated to this model. The relevant observations of such frequency changes are discussed. The calculated simultaneous changes in the field strength and chromospheric temperature result in the frequency shifts that are similar to those of the observations.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 69-72
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The specific attraction and, in large part, the significance of solar magnetograms lie in the fact that they give the most important data on the electric currents and the nonpotentiality of active regions. Using the vector magnetograms from the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), we employ a unique technique in the area of data analysis for resolving the 180 deg ambiguity in order to calculate the spatial structure of the vertical electric current density. The 180 deg ambiguity is resolved by applying concepts from the nonlinear multivariable optimization theory. The technique is shown to be of particular importance in very nonpotential active regions. The characterization of the vertical electric current density for a set of vector magnetograms using this method then gives the spatial scale, locations, and magnitude of these current systems. The method, which employs an intermediate parametric function which covers the magnetogram and which defines the local `preferred' direction, minimizes a specific functional of the observed transverse magnetic field. The specific functional that is successful is the integral of the square of the vertical current density. We find that the vertical electric current densities have common characteristics for the extended bipolar (beta) (gamma) (delta)-regions studied. The largest current systems have j(sub z)'s which maximizes around 30 mA/sq m and have a linear decreasing distribution to a diameter of 30 Mn.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X); 445; 2; p. 982-998
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Relative abundances of oxygen, neon, and magnesium have been derived for a sample of nine solar active regions, flares, and an erupting prominance by combining plots of the ion differential emission measures. The observations were photographed in the 300-600 A range by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) spectroheliograph on Skylab. Methods for deriving the Mg/Ne abundance ratio-which measures the separation between the low- first ionization potential (FIP) and high-FIP abundnace plateaus-have been described in previous papers. In this paper we describe the spectroscopic methods for deriving the O/Ne abundance ratio, which gives the ratio between two high-FIP elements. The plot of the O/Ne ratio versus the Mg/Ne ratio in the sample of nine Skylab events is shown. The variation in the Mg/Ne ratio by a factor of 6 is associated with a much smaller range in the O/Ne ratio. This is broadly consistent with the presence of the standard FIP pattern of abundances in the outer atmosphere of the Sun. However, a real change in the relative abundances of oxygen and neon by a factor of 1.5 cannot be excluded.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: The Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X); 442; 1; p. 446-450
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We use the ray description of acoustic-gravity modes to calculate time-distance diagrams for the quiet Sun and for regions in the vicinity of a sunspot with a monolithic flux-tube structure. Time-distance curves for the quiet Sun match the observations of Duvall et al. In the vicinity of a sunspot these quiet Sun curves split into a family of closely spaced curves. The structure of this bandlike feature is found to be sensitive to the sunspot model and can be a diagnostic of the subsurface geometry of the sunspot flux tube.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X); 438; 1; p. 454-462
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We have investigated more than 450 coronal mass ejections (CME's) observed between 1979-1985 (by SOLWIND) having speed more than 500 km/s. To carry out the study we have used the method of time and spatial correlations. From the study we have found the following: (1) About 50% CMEs are related with coronal holes; (2) About 15% CMEs are related with solar flares; (3) About 25% CMEs are associated with eruptive prominence; and (4) About 10% CMEs are not related with any solar phenomena. The relationship of CMEs and solar radio bursts are also studied. In the light of above, we are of the view that there may be two types of CMEs. The origin of one of them may be related with coronal holes and that for other may be solar flares and prominences.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 98; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We are designing a Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) capable of observing the Thomson-scattered signal from transient density features in the heliosphere from a spacecraft situated near AU. The imager is designed to trace these features, which include coronal mass ejections. corotating structures and shock waves, to elongations greater than 90 deg from the Sun. The instrument may be regarded as a progeny of the heliospheric imaging capability shown possible by the zodiacal-light photometers of the HELIOS spacecraft. The instrument we are designing would make more effective use of in-situ solar wind data from spacecraft in the vicinity of the imager by extending these observations to the surrounding environment. The observations from the instrument should allow deconvolution of these structures from the perspective views obtained as they pass the spacecraft. An imager at Earth could allow up to three days warning of the arrival of a mass ejection from the Sun .
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 97; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The radio and plasma wave receivers on the Ulysses spacecraft have detected thousands of short-duration bursts of waves at approximately the electron plasma frequency. These wave events believed to be Langmuir waves are usually less than approximately 5 minutes in duration. They occur in or at the boundaries of depletions in the magnetic field amplitude known as magnetic holes. Using the 16 sec time resolution provided by the plasma frequency receiver, it is possible to examine the density structure inside of magnetic holes. Even higher time resolutions are sometimes available from the radio receiver data. The Ulysses observations show that these wave bursts occur more frequently at high heliographic latitudes; the occurrence rates depend on both latitude and distance from the Sun. We review the statistics for the wave events, compare them to magnetic and plasma parameters, and review the reasons for the more frequent occurrence at high heliographic latitudes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 75; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 66
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: One of the most important parameters in MHD description of the solar wind is the electric conductivity of plasma. There exist now two quite different approaches to the evaluation of this parameter. In the first one a value of conductivity taken from the most elaborated current theory of plasma should be used in calculations. The second one deals with the empirical, phenomenological value of conductivity. E.g.: configuration of interplanetary magnetic field, stretched by the expanding corona, depends on the magnitude of electrical conductivity of plasma in the solar wind. Knowing the main empirical features of the field configuration, one may estimate the apparent phenomenological value of resistance. The estimations show that the electrical conductivity should be approximately 10(exp 13) times smaller than that calculated by Spitzer. It must be noted that the empirical value should be treated with caution. Due to the method of its obtaining it may be used only for 'large-scale' description of slow processes like coronal expansion. It cannot be valid for 'quick' processes, changing the state of plasma, like collisions with obstacles, e.g., planets and vehicles. The second approach is well known in large-scale planetary hydrodynamics, stemming from the ideas of phenomenological thermodynamics. It could formulate real problems which should be solved by modern plasma physics, oriented to be adequate for complicated processes in space.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 75; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Between 1 and 2 solar radii, the Coulomb-collision mean free path for thermal ions exceeds the scale height of the solar atmosphere. The expanding solar plasma becomes collisionless and the kinetics of the solar wind are no longer dominated by thermalizing collisions. The usual Braginskii-type expressions for solar wind ion heat flux and viscosity are no longer valid. However, another microscale still exists in the solar wind, dictated by the gyro-radius of ions in the turbulent embedded solar wind magnetic field. Wave-particle interactions will act to isotropize (but not thermalize) particle distributions, and the relevant microscale for this process is the ion gyro-radius. The ion distribution can be modelled as undergoing isotropizing 'collisions,' with the relevant mean free path scaling with gyro-radius. Here, the author presents the heat flux and viscosity expected for solar wind protons which are relaxing to isotropy on a microscale that scales with gyro-radius. The collisionless viscosity and heat flux have a functional dependence different than their collisional analogs. The collisional expressions for ion viscosity and heat flux drastically overestimate the efficiency of diffusive energy and momentum transport actually operative in the solar wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 74; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The abundance of helium in the solar wind averages approximately 4% but has been observed to vary by more than two orders of magnitude from 0.1 to 30%. Physical processes responsible for this variability are still not clearly understood. Previous work has shown a correlation between low He abundance and coronal streamer plasma and between high He abundance and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). We now have out-of-ecliptic data on helium in the solar wind from the plasma experiment aboard Ulysses. Tentative results show that the average high-latitude helium concentration is comparable to the in-ecliptic value for the present phase of the solar cycle, that excursions of the hour-averaged abundance very seldom fall outside the range 2.5 to 6.5%, and that there seems to be very little abundance enhancement associated with CMEs encountered at latitudes greater than 30 deg as opposed to the situation commonly encountered with in-ecliptic CMEs. In addition, preliminary observations of a single CME by both ISEE (in-ecliptic) and Ulysses (out-of-ecliptic) show a considerable He enhancement at ISEE with little or no perturbation of the average value at Ulysses' location. This paper will first present new results from the Ulysses mission up to the time of the meeting on the average abundance of helium in the solar wind as a function of spacecraft position, and will then focus on the out-of-ecliptic results including latitudinal abundance variations and observations of abundance enhancements (or lack thereof) in high-latitude CMEs.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 73; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The ESA-NASA satellite, to be launched in October 1995, carries three nested coronagraphs, which will image the solar corona from 1.1 R(solar mass) to 30 R(solar mass). Super polished mirrors have been developed for the design of a mirror Lyot coronagraph which has a straylight level comparable with the coronal intensity from 1.1 R, to 30 R(solar mass) Coronal details can be imaged with a spatial resolution of 6 arc seconds. A Fabry Perot interferometer with a spectral resolution of 0.7 A at the wavelength of the green coronal emission line will allow the simultaneous construction of spectra over the entire field of view of 10(exp 6) pixels. The middle coronagraph (1.5 R(solar mass) - 6 R(solar mass)) and the outer coronagraph (3 R(solar mass) - 30 R(solar mass)) are externally occulted lens Lyot coronagraphs. Their straylight level 10(exp -11) B(solar mass) and 10(exp -12) B(solar mass) respectively is an order of magnitude smaller than the intensity of the corona. The sensitivity of LASCO to distinguish between different solar wind acceleration mechanisms will be discussed as well as its ability to discern different CME models.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 70; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 70
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We present new calculations for several solar ions in the temperature range 10(exp 5) is less than T is less than 10(exp 6) K and discuss their diagnostic applications with the help of available observational data. In particular, we rediscuss the plasma density and temperature in the source region of the solar wind. We also study the variation of relative elemental abundances in the solar atmosphere and compare them with previous studies.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 69; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The difficulty in establishing the temperature structure and temperature gradient within coronal holes from limb observations is due to the frequent veiling of coronal holes by hotter and denser quiet regions often surrounding them and shaping their boundaries. Nevertheless probing the coronal hole medium itself can be made with a judicious choice of spectral lines. We show how a set of visible forbidden Fe lines, namely Fe IX 3801, Fe X 6374 and Fe Xl 7892 A which are sensitive to plasma temperatures less than or equal to 10(exp 6) K can achieve this purpose. We propose to use these lines in a coordinated manner with coronagraph observations. In addition observations made with the Fe XIV 5303 A line should yield information about any hot material intercepting the line of sight. The proposed combination of these Fe lines offers a very powerful diagnostic tool for coronal hole temperatures and structures.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 69; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Due to the rotation of the sun the solar corona can be observed under different directions at different times. Using methods of computer tomography the three-dimensional structure of the emissivity of the solar corona can be reconstructed. We discuss the feasibility of this method for stationary and for non-stationary corona and also for incomplete and finite resolution data. As example we present reconstructions based on YOHKOH-images, and we compare the results with ground-based optical corona observations. Structures are interpreted in terms of the solar magnetic field topology.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 68; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The universal induction heating mechanism supplying with the energy all the processes of coronal heating and the solar wind acceleration is developed. The observed relative 'trembling' of photospheric super-large scale magnetic fields with quasi-periods of 1-4 days amounts 30-40 percent in amplitude. The inductive electric field appears in the corona. The electric currents cause the Joule dissipation. The uneven heating leads to the solar wind acceleration. A model is suggested in which high-speed streams in space are caused by the combination of the enhanced inductive energy flux from the solar coronal active regions; the work against the regular magnetic field; losses from coronal emission. The consideration is made in terms of the dissipative solar wind theory with the finite electrical conductivity of plasma. The leakage of plasma and the energy flux across the magnetic field, caused by the induction heating processes, are taken into account. The polar coronal holes (and the mid-latitude ones) are indicators of energy transfer balance but not direct sources of high-speed streams in the solar wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 67; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 74
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Heat conduction from the corona is important in the solar wind energy budget. Until now all hydrodynamic solar wind models have been using the collisionally dominated gas approximation for the heat conductive flux. Observations of the solar wind show particle distribution functions which deviate significantly from a Maxwellian, and it is clear that the solar wind plasma is far from collisionally dominated. We have developed a numerical model for the solar wind which solves the full equation for the heat conductive flux together with the conservation equations for mass, momentum, and energy. The equations are obtained by taking moments of the Boltzmann equation, using an 8-moment approximation for the distribution function. For low-density solar winds the 8-moment approximation models give results which differ significantly from the results obtained in models assuming the gas to be collisionally dominated. The two models give more or less the same results in high density solar winds.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 66; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The energy budgets of the corona are substantially influenced by losses attributed to thermal conduction losses down the transition region, towards the chromosphere. Although Fourier law for such a plasma regime is now universally criticized as inappropriate, the direction of this heat flow seems to be certain. The purpose of this paper is to point out, based on conservation laws, the direction in which the heat must flow in this regime, provided it is known that there is a time independent expansion devoid of parallel currents. It will be argued that the direction of the heat flux is from the base of the transition region up into the corona, rather than the opposite. Under the circumstances mentioned above, the direction of the heat flow should be opposite to the gradient of the electron pressure gradient. Although the transition region is modeled as isobaric, this is only approximately true. Such a likely scenario makes the heat flow almost certainly to flow from the lower temperature base of the TR up into the incipient corona if a steady state current free expansion is to be maintained.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 66
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Utilizing an iterative scheme, a self-consistent axisymmetric MHD model for the solar wind has been developed. We use this model to evaluate the properties of the solar wind issuing from the open polar coronal hole regions of the Sun, during solar minimum. We explore the variation of solar wind parameters across the extent of the hole and we investigate how these variations are affected by the geometry of the hole and the strength of the field at the coronal base.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: In order to describe the distribution function f(v) of the solar wind electrons, the simplest model which is commonly used consists of the sum of two Maxwellians representing two distinct populations: a core (density n(sub c), temperature T(sub c)) and a halo (density n(sub h), temperature T(sub h)). It is possible, with the latter assumptions on the electron f(v), to determine the quasi-thermal noise (QTN) induced on an antenna by the motion of the ambient electrons in the solar wind. Using this distribution and the spectroscopy of thermal noise measurements from the radio receiver on Ulysses in the ecliptic plane, we deduce the total electron density N(sub e), the core temperature T(sub c), and the core and halo kinetic pressures N(sub c)T(sub c) and N(sub h)T(sub h). From these electron parameters, we can define a 'global' electron temperature as T(sub e) = (N(sub c)T(sub c) + N(sub h)T(sub h))/N(sub e). Here we present different radial gradients of T(sub e), between 1 and 3.3 AU, as a function of three classes of N(sub e) at 1 AU: low, intermediate, and high densities. In general all these gradients are found to be positive with different polytrope power law indexes between N(sub e) and T(sub e), which are in general lower than unity. We also show different behaviors of the ratio N(sub h)T(sub h)/N(sub c)T(sub c) for each density class considered. Some possible interpretations for these observations are discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 74; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The Wind spacecraft was launched in November 1994. In the first half of 1995 it was in the interplanetary medium upstream of the Earth. The Solar Wind and Suprathermal Ion Composition Experiment (SMS) on Wind consists of three sensors, the Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer (SWICS), the Suprathermal Ion Composition Spectrometer (STICS), and the high mass resolution spectrometer (MASS). All three instruments utilize electrostatic deflection combined with time-of-flight measurement. The data from these three sensors allows the determination of the ionic composition of the solar wind in a variety of solar wind conditions over a large energy/charge range (0.5 to 230 keV/e). We have examined the Wind database for time periods conducive to observing solar wind iron. With the high mass resolution of the MASS spectrometer (M/Delta-M greater than 100) iron is easily identified while the electrostatic deflection provides information concerning the mass/charge distribution. We present here the relative abundance of iron charge states in the solar wind near 1 AU.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 73; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer (SWICS) onboard Ulysses allows determination of the elemental composition of the solar wind and the charge states of all major solar wind ion species. Ulysses left the ecliptic plane in early 1992, crossed the Sun's south polar region in late 1994 and made a fast approach back towards the ecliptic in the first half of 1995. Data from this period were investigated for long-term variations in the solar wind composition. At midlatitudes Ulysses encountered periodically the fast solar wind stream emerging from the south coronal hole. As a consequence, dramatic variations in the charge-states arise, between high charge-states dominating in the current sheet solar wind and low charge states in the coronal hole stream. However, the initial analysis indicates that from midlatitudes onwards, with Ulysses permanently immersed in the coronal hole stream, the charge state and elemental abundance ratios of the major solar wind ion species stayed essentially constant. This implies that the temperature profile in the coronal hole at solar wind source altitudes exhibit no variation with solar latitude. It confirms that the south coronal hole is essentially unstructured down to scale lengths of several degrees in solar latitude.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 74; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We characterize the dynamic properties of He ions of the solar wind. Because of the non-negligible abundance and the significant fraction of momentum flux inherent in helium ions, this species has an influence on the state of turbulence. Especially, we analyze the helium dynamic properties of different solar wind types. After a discussion of the influence of measurement errors on the statistical analysis of He bulk velocities, we investigate the structure function dependency on the solar wind state. We find a self-similar sealing in the range of minutes to days with characteristic structure function slopes deviating from the canonical Kolmogorov values. For comparison with previous studies, we also analyze H structure functions of the same time periods and discuss differences of coinciding He and H structure functions in the framework of the concept of intermittency.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 73; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: From the late 50s to early 70s, attempts were made by at least two different groups to obtain information on physical conditions in the corona by means of active radar soundings. While echoes from the Sun were unquestionably detected. difficulties in their interpretation led to inconclusive results. A major hindrance to these efforts was the limited understanding of the day-to-day structure of the corona then available (e.g., pioneering work in solar wind studies were just underway. and coronal holes had not yet been discovered). With the end of the Cold War, the very large over-the-horizon (OTH) radars operated by the Air Force have been opened up to basic science research through the end of the fiscal year. In light of advances made in coronal physics and in signal processing technology since these early experiments were undertaken. access to the state-of-the art OTH-B radar offers a rare opportunity to gauge anew the scientific potential for radar sounding of the Sun. In principle, it should be possible to obtain useful data on plasma densities and motions over a range of heights in the corona near 0.5R(solar mass) above the solar surface We report here the preliminary findings from a sequence of observations taken over the course of a solar rotation.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 70; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Magnetic holes in the solar wind, which are characterized by isolated local depressions in the magnetic field magnitude, have been observed previously. The Unified Radio and Plasma Wave (URAP) instrument of Ulysses has found that within such magnetic structures, electrostatic waves at kHz frequency and ultralow frequency electromagnetic waves are often excited and seen as short duration wave bursts. Most of these bursts occur near the ambient electron plasma frequency, which suggests that the waves are Langmuir waves. Such waves are usually excited by electron streams. Some evidence of the streaming of energetic electrons required for exciting Langmuir waves has been observed. These electrons may have originated at sources near the Sun, which would imply that the magnetic structures containing the waves would exist as long channels formed by field and plasma conditions near the Sun. On the other hand, the electrons could be suprathermal 'tails' from wave collapse processes occurring near the spacecraft. In either case, the Langmuir waves excited in the magnetic holes provide a measurement of the plasma density inside the holes. Low frequency electromagnetic waves, having frequencies of a fraction of the local electron cyclotron frequency, sometimes accompany the Langmuir waves observed in magnetic holes. Waves excited in this frequency range are very likely to be whistler-mode waves. They may have been excited by an electron temperature anisotropy which has been observed in the vicinity of the magnetic holes or generated through the decay of Langmuir waves.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 76; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 83
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A new concept interpreting solar wind parameters is suggested. The process of increasing twofold of a moving volume in the solar wind (with energy transfer across its surface which is comparable with its whole internal energy) is a more rapid process than the relaxation for the pressure. Thus, the solar wind is unique from the point of view of thermodynamics of irreversible processes. The presumptive source of the solar wind creation - the induction electric field of the solar origin - has very low entropy. The state of interplanetary plasma must be very far from the thermodynamic equilibrium. Plasma internal energy is contained mainly in non-degenerate forms (plasma waves, resonant plasma oscillations, electric currents). Microscopic oscillating electric fields in the solar wind plasma should be about 1 V/m. It allows one to describe the solar wind by simple dissipative MHD equations with small effective mean free path (required for hydrodynamical description), low value of electrical conductivity combined with very big apparent thermal conductivity (required for observed solar wind acceleration). These internal parameters are interrelated only due to their origin: they are externally driven. Their relation can change during the interaction of solar wind plasma with an obstacle (planet, spacecraft). The concept proposed can be verified by the special electric field measurements, not ruining the primordial plasma state.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 75; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Solar wind suprathermal electron distributions in the solar wind generally carry a field-aligned antisunward heat flux. Within coronal mass ejections and upstream of strong shocks driven by corotating interaction regions (CIRs), counterstreaming electron beams are observed. We present observations by the Ulysses solar wind plasma experiment of a new class of suprathermal electron signatures. At low solar latitudes and heliocentric distances beyond 3.5 AU Ulysses encountered several intervals, ranging in duration from 1 hour to 22 hours, in which the suprathermal distributions included an antisunward field-aligned beam and a return population with a flux dropout typically spanning +/- 60 deg from the sunward field-aligned direction. All events occurred within CIRs, downstream of the forward and reverse shocks or waves bounding the interaction regions. We evaluate the hypothesis that the sunward-moving electrons result from reflection of the antisunward beams at magnetic field compressions downstream from the observations, with wide loss cones caused by the relatively weak compression ratio. This hypothesis requires that field magnitude within the CIRs actually increase with increasing field-aligned distance from the Sun. Details of the electron distributions and ramifications for CIR and shock geometry will be presented.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 74; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Ion velocity distribution functions have been measured with high time resolution by the TAUS plasma instrument on the PHOBOS mission to Mars in 1989. The unambiguous separation of protons and alpha-particles by TAUS enabled us to study the nonthermal features of their distributions separately and to analyze the stability of the distributions against excitation of waves in the cyclotron-frequency domain. Typical nonthermal features include temperature anisotropies, with T(sub perpendicular) larger than T(sub parallel), and ion beam populations drifting along the local magnetic field direction. Also, distinctly non-gyrotropic alpha-particle velocity distributions were sometimes found. Non-gyrotropy strongly changes the wave dispersion and gives rise to new growing modes, related to the coupling of the standard wave modes existing in gyrotropic plasma. It is found that for the measured non-gyrotropic ion distributions the right-hand polarized wave can also be excited by a temperature anistropy instead of the usual beam drift.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 74; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: As Ulysses journeys from the southern to the northern solar pole, the newly launched Wind spacecraft is monitoring the solar wind near 1 AU, slightly upstream of the Earth. Different solar wind structures pass over both spacecraft as coronal holes and other features rotate in and out of view. Ulysses and Wind are presently on opposing sides of the sun allowing us to monitor these streams for extended periods of time. Composition measurements made by instruments on both spacecraft provide information concerning the evolution and properties of these structures. We have combined data from the Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer (SWICS) on Ulysses and the high mass resolution spectrometer (MASS) on Wind to determine the charge state distribution of sulfur in the solar wind. Both instruments employ electrostatic deflection with time-of-flight measurement. The high mass resolution of the MASS instrument (M/Delta-M approximately 100) allows sulfur to be isolated easily while the stepping energy/charge selection provides charge state information. SWICS measurements allow the unique identification of heavy ions by their mass and mass/charge with resolutions of M/Delta-M approximately 3 and M/q/Delta(M/q) approximately 20. The two instruments complement each other nicely in that MASS has the greater mass resolution while SWICS has the better mass/charge resolution and better statistics.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 73; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 87
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Solar wind data obtained with ion mass-energy-spectrometer on the Prognoz 7 satellite are analyzed to study the alpha-particle and proton features in different types of solar wind streams. In the streams from coronal holes the abundance of helium relative to proton slightly increases with increasing solar wind flux and proton density while in the streams from coronal streamers it decreases. These results indicate that the mechanisms of solar wind formation in different regions of solar corona differ. Preferential alpha-particle acceleration and heating are often observed in the streams from coronal holes. Minimum (as well as negative) values of alpha-proton velocity difference are recorded in the heliospheric current sheet, shocked plasma, and coronal mass ejections. Dependences of alpha-proton velocity difference and temperature ratio on several MHD parameters (Alfven velocity, number of Coulomb collisions. etc.) are compared for different types of streams. For velocity difference the dependences in streams from coronal holes and streamers are often similar to each other, and they differ from the ones in the heliospheric current sheet. For temperature ratio the dependences in heliospheric current sheet and streams from coronal streamers are similar, and they differ in streams from coronal holes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 73; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The electron temperature in the inner corona can be derived from spectral line intensity measurements by comparing the ratio of the measured intensities of two spectral lines to the ratio calculated from theoretical models. In a homogeneous plasma the line ratio technique can be used for any two lines if the ratio of the intensities is independent of the density. The corona, however, is far from homogeneous. Even large coronal holes present at the solar poles at solar minimum can be partly or completely obscured by emission from hotter and denser surrounding regions. In this paper we investigate the effect of these surrounding regions on coronal hole temperatures. using daily intensity measurements at 1.15 Rs of the Fe XIV 5303 A and Fe X 6374 A spectral lines carried out at the National Solar Observatory at Sacramento Peak. We show that the temperatures derived using the line ratio technique for these two spectral lines can vary by more than 0.8 x 10(exp 6) K due to the contribution from surrounding regions. This example demonstrates the inadequacy of spectral lines with widely separate peak temperatures for temperature diagnostic.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 69; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The large-scale temperature structure of the low corona is investigated using synoptic temperature maps, derived from the intensity ratio of the green (Fe XIV) and red (Fe X) coronal lines as observed at the National Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak. This intensity ratio is sensitive to coronal plasma with temperatures in the range of 1-2 MK. The synoptic maps indicate an association between high coronal temperature and the large-scale magnetic field. A comparison with WSO 'source surface' synoptic maps shows that especially when the heliospheric current sheet is stable over several rotations, the large-scale high-temperature features follow the current sheet remarkably well. For recent Carrington rotations temperature maps have been constructed for various heights between 1.15 and 1.45 solar radii. For these maps the correspondence with the current sheet (calculated at 2.5 solar radii) improves with height. Deviations between temperature structure and magnetic structure appears to be largest when the magnetic structure changes rapidly from rotation to rotation.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 69; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The Yohkoh soft X-ray telescope (SXT) records on the order of 50 solar images per day in two different color filters. These provide material for the generation of synoptic maps, which compress the 3-dimensional data cube into two dimensions. We are creating synoptic maps from strips of data both at disk center and at different heights, including limb maps that are analogous to those produced by ground-based coronagraphs. The ratios of intensities in images taken in two filters provide estimates of the electron temperature in the range 1 - 3 x 10(exp 6) K. These are broad-band temperature maps; rather than maps created with discrete sampling as in the case of the coronal green and red lines. We discuss the properties of these maps and their application to the study of energy release in the corona.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 68; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The large-scale photospheric magnetic field, measured at Stanford, has been analyzed in terms of surface harmonics. Changes of the photospheric field which occur within whole solar rotation period can be resolved by this analysis. For this reason we used daily magnetograms of the line-of-sight magnetic field component observed from Earth over solar disc. We have estimated the period during which day-to-day full disc magnetograms must be collected. An original algorithm was applied to resolve time variations of spherical harmonics that reflect time evolution of large-scale magnetic field within solar rotation period. This method of magnetic field presentation can be useful enough in lack of direct magnetograph observations due to sometimes bad weather conditions. We have used the calculated surface harmonics to reconstruct the large-scale magnetic field structure on the source surface near the sun - the origin of heliospheric current sheet and solar wind streams. The obtained results have been compared with spacecraft in situ observations and geomagnetic activity. We tried to show that proposed technique can trace shon-time variations of heliospheric current sheet and short-lived solar wind streams. We have compared also our results with those obtained traditionally from potential field approximation and extrapolation using synoptic charts as initial boundary conditions.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 67; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: In addressing one of the fundamental problems in solar physics establishing the mechanism(s) responsible for the solar wind acceleration and the corona heating - it is essential to have a reliable knowledge of the heliocentric radial dependence of the solar wind properties. Adequate data are available for small solar distances R less than 4 R(solar mass) from coronal white light and EUV observations and at distances R greater than 60 R(solar mass) from in situ measurements. One of the few methods available to fill in the gap between these boundaries is the radio scintillation technique. Taking the example of the solar wind velocity, the most reliable such measurements are obtained when phase fluctuation observations of scattered radio waves, which are not susceptible to saturation effects, are recorded at two or more widely-spaced ground stations. Two extensive observation campaigns of this type were carried out with the Venus-orbiting satellites Venera 10 in 1976 and Venera 15/16 in 1984. The observations were performed over the course of three months near superior conjunction at solar offset distances R approximately 6-80 R(solar mass). The main results from the subsequent analysis of these data are: (1) velocities vary between 250 and 380 km s(exp -1) for R greater than 20 R(solar mass), agreeing with similar measurements using natural sources (IPS); (2) velocities derived from two-station phase fluctuation observations varv between 70 and 120 km s(exp -1) for R less than 12 R(solar mass), i.e. values substantially lower than those derived from conventional IPS data; and (3) it is suggested that the different velocity profiles derived from the two data sets at small R may be due to the effects of magnetosonic and Alfvenic waves on radio wave scattering. Further analysis of additional radio sounding data should help resolve the apparent discrepancy.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ; 61
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  • 93
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: We re-examine the inviscid solar-wind equations with heat conduction from below, and establish a fundamentally new approach for finding stellar solutions. Although the problem is fourth order, only two independent integration constants can be assigned, since two boundary conditions that are required to specify well-behaved supersonic solutions determine the values of the other two constants. The solar-wind-model of Noble and Scarf are essentially accurate for practical purposes, but in a fundamental sense they are not self-consistent. At the supersonic level, the ratio of thermal energy to gravitational potential, (kTr/GMm)(sub s), must lie in a narrow range, between 0.4375 and about 0.40, to permit well-behaved solutions for ionized hydrogen. For a supersonic solution this ratio uniquely determines the constants A and epsilon, which in turn govern not only the escape flux and the energy flux per particle but also T'(lambda approaches 0), the temperature gradient at infinity. It is very difficult to find solutions by trial and error, without employing T'(0) as a guide to the iteration of A and epsilon, because not only must (kTr/GMm)(sub s) be chosen within the acceptable range but then either A or epsilon must be guessed with phenomenal accuracy. Otherwise the numerical integration of temperature and expansion velocity do not yield acceptable values at infinity.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 30; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 94
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Using Skylab XUV data, we examine some properties of the source regions of the solar wind. In particular, we discuss the physical nature of polar plumes and their relationship to the polar wind, the nature of the source regions of the slow solar wind, and the relationship between abundance anomalies (the FIP effect) determined from the Skylab data and the sources of fast and slow wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 31; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Type 3 radio bursts allow us to follow energetic electrons ejected by solar flares into the interplanetary medium, even when the observer is far away from the electrons. The emission frequency f(sub p) is related to the ambient density n(sub e) by f(sub p) varies as the square root of n(sub e), and as a function of the distance r to the sun we have approximately n(sub e) varies as r(exp -2); as a consequence, on a 1/f - t dynamic spectrum type 3 bursts appear as nearly straight traces, whose slope gives an estimation of the source speed. We used the data of the URAP radio receiver on Ulysses (1-1000 kHz), observing sources in the solar wind, and the ground data of the ARTEMIS spectrograph (100-500 MHz), observing sources of the corona, over the years 1991-1994. We found a surprisingly large number of excellent high-frequency - low-frequency associations. A type 3 burst group on ARTEMIS (10 to 100 bursts over 1 to 10 minutes) typically gives rise to one isolated burst on Ulysses. As bursts often start in high frequencies during the maximum phase of flares, this demonstrates in a very convincing manner that some of the flare electrons themselves make it all the way to the interplanetary medium. We discuss decorrelation cases in the context of geometrical configuration between the active region and the two observing sites. We also study how apparent electron speeds vary with the distance to the sun.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 30; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Radio propagation measurements represent a powerful means for remote probing of electron density and solar wind speed in the acceleration region of the solar wind not yet explored by in situ measurements. Recent investigations based on radio propagation measurements have led to considerable progress in our knowledge of the general morphology of solar wind fluctuations and structure, especially in terms of their relationship to solar wind properties that have been observed directly by fields and particles measurements, and to coronal features observed in white-light measurements. The purpose of this paper is to present an overview of the latest results on quasi-stationary structure covering the large scale variation of solar wind speed over the streamer belt and coronal hole regions, coronal streamers (source of slow solar wind) and their associated small-scale electron density structure, plumes, density and fractional or relative density fluctuations, and the spectral characteristics of the electron density fluctuations. The radio propagation measurements not only reveal new information on the structure near the Sun, but also show that the structure appears to undergo substantial evolution on its way to 0.3 AU, the closest radial distance for which direct in situ spacecraft measurements are available.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 29; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: In the solar corona shock waves are generated by flares and/or coronal mass ejections. They manifest themselves in solar type 2 radio bursts appearing as emission stripes with a slow drift from high to low frequencies in dynamic radio spectra. Their nonthermal radio emission indicates that electrons are accelerated to suprathermal and/or relativistic velocities at these shocks. As well known by extraterrestrial in-situ measurements supercritical, quasi-parallel, collisionless shocks are accompanied by so-called SLAMS (short large amplitude magnetic field structures). These SLAMS can act as strong magnetic mirrors, at which charged particles can be reflected and accelerated. Thus, thermal electrons gain energy due to multiple reflections between two SLAMS and reach suprathermal and relativistic velocities. This mechanism of accelerating electrons is discussed for circumstances in the solar corona and may be responsible for the so-called 'herringbones' observed in solar type 2 radio bursts.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: International Solar Wind 8 Conference; 28; NASA-CR-199940
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  • 98
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The signature of the solar cycle appears in helioseismic frequencies and splittings. It is known that the changing outer superadiabatic region of the sun is responsible for this. The deeper solar-cycle mechanism from the surface changes, and, in particular, how magnetic fields perturb the global modes, the solar irradiance and the luminosity, is discussed. The irradiance and helioseismic changes are described. The interpretation of seismic and photometric data is discussed, considering current one-dimensional models and phenomenology. It is discussed how the long term solar-cycle luminosity effect could be caused by changes occurring near the base of the convection zone (CZ). It is shown that a thin toroidal flux sheath at the top of the radiative zone changed the thermal stratification immediately below the CZ over a solar-cycle timescale in two ways: the temperature of the magnetized fluid becomes hotter than the surrounding fluid, and the temperature gradient steepens above the magnetized region. The testing of CZ dynamics and extension of numerical experiments to global scales are considered.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 1: Invited Reviews and Working Group Reports; p 145-149
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The chromospheric bright points are the sites where intense heating occurs in three minute period waves. The bright points are grouped into three classes depending on the amount of intensity enhancement and the pattern of their dynamical evolution. A 35-minute time series of photographic spectra in the Ca(II) H line on a quiet region ofthe center of the solar disk was used to show that the period of intensity oscillations seen at sites of the bright points is independent of their intensity enhancements. The series was also used to show that the period may not depend on the strength of the magnetic fields with which they are associated. A linear regression equation was fitted to a curve representing the variation of the period of intensity oscillations with the peak value of I(sub H2V). The correlation coefficient was found to be 0.19.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 525-527
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The preliminary results of the photometry of CaII K spectroheliograms are presented. From the spectrograms for 1992, plages, the magnetic network, intranetwork elements and the chromospheric background were separated using the histogram method. The intensity and area of these separated features, as well as the full disk intensity, were derived. The spatial K index was compared to the spectral CaII K index derived from line profiles. It was found that the spatial K index and intensity of plages, the network elements and the intranetwork and background regions were highly correlated with the MgII h and k c/w ratio.
    Keywords: SOLAR PHYSICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 4th SOHO on Helioseismology. Volume 2: Posters; p 429-435
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