학술논문

Coronal Heating Rate in the Slow Solar Wind
Document Type
article
Source
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol 955, Iss 1, p L4 (2023)
Subject
Magnetohydrodynamics
Magnetohydrodynamical simulations
Interplanetary turbulence
Solar corona
Solar coronal heating
Solar wind
Astrophysics
QB460-466
Language
English
ISSN
2041-8213
2041-8205
Abstract
This Letter reports the first observational estimate of the heating rate in the slowly expanding solar corona. The analysis exploits the simultaneous remote and local observations of the same coronal plasma volume, with the Solar Orbiter/Metis and the Parker Solar Probe instruments, respectively, and relies on the basic solar wind magnetohydrodynamic equations. As expected, energy losses are a minor fraction of the solar wind energy flux, since most of the energy dissipation that feeds the heating and acceleration of the coronal flow occurs much closer to the Sun than the heights probed in the present study, which range from 6.3 to 13.3 R _⊙ . The energy deposited to the supersonic wind is then used to explain the observed slight residual wind acceleration and to maintain the plasma in a nonadiabatic state. As derived in the Wentzel–Kramers–Brillouin limit, the present energy transfer rate estimates provide a lower limit, which can be very useful in refining the turbulence-based modeling of coronal heating and subsequent solar wind acceleration.