logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Direct observations of a complex coronal web driving highly structured slow solar wind

Space Sciences

Direct observations of a complex coronal web driving highly structured slow solar wind

L. P. Chitta, D. B. Seaton, et al.

Discover the complex interplay of magnetized plasma structures in the solar corona that are driving the enigmatic slow component of solar wind. This groundbreaking research by L. P. Chitta and colleagues unveils how the dynamic magnetic separatrix web influences solar wind behavior.... show more
Abstract
The solar wind consists of continuous streams of charged particles that escape into the heliosphere from the Sun, and is split into fast and slow components, with the fast wind emerging from the interiors of coronal holes. Near the ecliptic plane, the fast wind from low-latitude coronal holes is interspersed with a highly structured slow solar wind, the source regions and drivers of which are poorly understood. Here we report extreme-ultraviolet observations that reveal a spatially complex web of magnetized plasma structures that persistently interact and reconnect in the middle corona. Coronagraphic white-light images show concurrent emergence of slow wind streams over these coronal web structures. With advanced global magnetohydrodynamics coronal models, we demonstrate that the observed coronal web is a direct imprint of the magnetic separatrix web (S-web). By revealing a highly dynamic portion of the S-web, our observations open a window into important middle-coronal processes that appear to play a key role in driving the structured slow solar wind.
Publisher
Nature Astronomy
Published On
Nov 24, 2022
Authors
L. P. Chitta, D. B. Seaton, C. Downs, C. E. DeForest, A. K. Higginson
Tags
solar wind
coronal structures
magnetized plasma
magnetic separatrix web
slow solar wind
coronagraphic images
magnetohydrodynamics
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny