论文标题
慢性太阳风的磁场几何形状和组成变化:硫的情况
Magnetic Field Geometry and Composition Variation in Slow Solar Winds: The Case of Sulfur
论文作者
论文摘要
我们介绍了对染色体中浮动力的第一个电离电位(FIP)分级场景的检查,以及通过使用高级组合探索器(ACE)的观测值对慢速太阳风的源头的影响。 Following a recent conjecture that the abundance enhancements of intermediate FIP elements, S, P, and C, in slow solar winds can be explained by the release of plasma fractionated on open fields, though from regions of stronger magnetic field than usually associated with fast solar wind source regions, we identify a period in 2008 containing four solar rotation cycles that show repeated pattern of sulfur abundance enhancement corresponding to a decrease in solar wind 速度。我们确定了全球磁场模型中这些慢风的源区域,发现它们位于冠状孔及其相邻活动区域之间的边界,起源于封闭和开放的初始场合构。基于磁场外推,我们对分馏并将结果与ACE测量的元素丰度进行了比较,以估计开放和封闭场的太阳风贡献,并突出显示了进一步工作的潜在有用的方向。
We present an examination of the First Ionization Potential (FIP) fractionation scenario invoking the ponderomotive force in the chromosphere, and its implications for the source(s) of slow speed solar winds by using observations from The Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE). Following a recent conjecture that the abundance enhancements of intermediate FIP elements, S, P, and C, in slow solar winds can be explained by the release of plasma fractionated on open fields, though from regions of stronger magnetic field than usually associated with fast solar wind source regions, we identify a period in 2008 containing four solar rotation cycles that show repeated pattern of sulfur abundance enhancement corresponding to a decrease in solar wind speed. We identify the source regions of these slow winds in global magnetic field models and find that they lie at the boundaries between a coronal hole and its adjacent active region, with origins in both closed and open initial field configurations. Based on magnetic field extrapolations, we model the fractionation and compare our results with element abundances measured by ACE to estimate the solar wind contributions from open and closed field, and to highlight potentially useful directions for further work.