학술논문

Magnetic Topology of Active Regions and Coronal Holes: Implications for Coronal Outflows and the Solar Wind.
Document Type
Article
Source
Solar Physics. Nov2012, Vol. 281 Issue 1, p237-262. 26p. 5 Color Photographs, 1 Diagram, 7 Graphs, 2 Maps.
Subject
*SOLAR magnetic fields
*TOPOLOGY
*CORONAL holes
*SOLAR wind
*EXTRAPOLATION
*ASTRONOMICAL observations
*SOLAR-terrestrial physics
*SOLAR active regions
*SUN
Language
ISSN
0038-0938
Abstract
During 2 - 18 January 2008 a pair of low-latitude opposite-polarity coronal holes (CHs) were observed on the Sun with two active regions (ARs) and the heliospheric plasma sheet located between them. We use the Hinode/EUV Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) to locate AR-related outflows and measure their velocities. Solar-Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) imaging is also employed, as are the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) in-situ observations, to assess the resulting impacts on the solar wind (SW) properties. Magnetic-field extrapolations of the two ARs confirm that AR plasma outflows observed with EIS are co-spatial with quasi-separatrix layer locations, including the separatrix of a null point. Global potential-field source-surface modeling indicates that field lines in the vicinity of the null point extend up to the source surface, enabling a part of the EIS plasma upflows access to the SW. We find that similar upflow properties are also observed within closed-field regions that do not reach the source surface. We conclude that some of plasma upflows observed with EIS remain confined along closed coronal loops, but that a fraction of the plasma may be released into the slow SW. This suggests that ARs bordering coronal holes can contribute to the slow SW. Analyzing the in-situ data, we propose that the type of slow SW present depends on whether the AR is fully or partially enclosed by an overlying streamer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]