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Highly structured slow solar wind emerging from an equatorial coronal hole

Title: Highly structured slow solar wind emerging from an equatorial coronal hole
Authors: Bale, SD
Badman, ST
Bonnell, JW
Bowen, TA
Burgess, D
Case, AW
Cattell, CA
Chandran, BDG
Chaston, CC
Chen, CHK
Drake, JF
De Wit, TD
Eastwood, JP
Ergun, RE
Farrell, WM
Fong, C
Goetz, K
Goldstein, M
Goodrich, KA
Harvey, PR
Horbury, TS
Howes, GG
Kasper, JC
Kellogg, PJ
Klimchuk, JA
Korreck, KE
Krasnoselskikh, VV
Krucker, S
Laker, R
Larson, DE
MacDowall, RJ
Maksimovic, M
Malaspina, DM
Martinez-Oliveros, J
McComas, DJ
Meyer-Vernet, N
Moncuquet, M
Mozer, FS
Phan, TD
Pulupa, M
Raouafi, NE
Salem, C
Stansby, D
Stevens, M
Szabo, A
Velli, M
Woolley, T
Wygant, JR
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: During the solar minimum, when the Sun is at its least active, the solar wind1,2 is observed at high latitudes as a predominantly fast (more than 500 kilometres per second), highly Alfvénic rarefied stream of plasma originating from deep within coronal holes. Closer to the ecliptic plane, the solar wind is interspersed with a more variable slow wind3 of less than 500 kilometres per second. The precise origins of the slow wind streams are less certain4; theories and observations suggest that they may originate at the tips of helmet streamers5,6, from interchange reconnection near coronal hole boundaries7,8, or within coronal holes with highly diverging magnetic fields9,10. The heating mechanism required to drive the solar wind is also unresolved, although candidate mechanisms include Alfvén-wave turbulence11,12, heating by reconnection in nanoflares13, ion cyclotron wave heating14 and acceleration by thermal gradients1. At a distance of one astronomical unit, the wind is mixed and evolved, and therefore much of the diagnostic structure of these sources and processes has been lost. Here we present observations from the Parker Solar Probe15 at 36 to 54 solar radii that show evidence of slow Alfvénic solar wind emerging from a small equatorial coronal hole. The measured magnetic field exhibits patches of large, intermittent reversals that are associated with jets of plasma and enhanced Poynting flux and that are interspersed in a smoother and less turbulent flow with a near-radial magnetic field. Furthermore, plasma-wave measurements suggest the existence of electron and ion velocity-space micro-instabilities10,16 that are associated with plasma heating and thermalization processes. Our measurements suggest that there is an impulsive mechanism associated with solar-wind energization and that micro-instabilities play a part in heating, and we provide evidence that low-latitude coronal holes are a key source of the slow solar wind.
Issue Date: 12-Dec-2019
Date of Acceptance: 11-Nov-2019
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/84221
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1818-7
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Research
Start Page: 237
End Page: 242
Journal / Book Title: Nature
Volume: 576
Issue: 7786
Copyright Statement: © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2019.
Sponsor/Funder: The Leverhulme Trust
Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)
Funder's Grant Number: VP2-2017-029
ST/S000364/1
Keywords: Science & Technology
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Science & Technology - Other Topics
MAGNETIC-FIELD
INTERPLANETARY
MODEL
MISSION
WAVES
Science & Technology
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Science & Technology - Other Topics
MAGNETIC-FIELD
INTERPLANETARY
MODEL
MISSION
WAVES
General Science & Technology
Publication Status: Published
Open Access location: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10090127
Online Publication Date: 2019-12-04
Appears in Collections:Space and Atmospheric Physics
Physics
Faculty of Natural Sciences