Matching Temporal Signatures of Solar Features to Their Corresponding Solar-Wind Outflows
Abstract
The role of small-scale coronal eruptive phenomena in the generation and heating of the solar wind remains an open question. Here, we investigate the role played by coronal jets in forming the solar wind by testing whether temporal variations associated with jetting in EUV intensity can be identified in the outflowing solar-wind plasma. This type of comparison is challenging due to inherent differences between remote-sensing observations of the source and in-situ observations of the outflowing plasma, as well as travel time and evolution of the solar wind throughout the heliosphere. To overcome these, we propose a novel algorithm combining signal filtering, two-step solar-wind ballistic back-mapping, window shifting, and Empirical Mode Decomposition. We first validate the method using synthetic data, before applying it to measurements from the Solar Dynamics Observatory and Wind spacecraft. The algorithm enables the direct comparison of remote-sensing observations of eruptive phenomena in the corona to in-situ measurements of solar-wind parameters, among other potential uses. After application to these datasets, we find several time windows where signatures of dynamics found in the corona are embedded in the solar-wind stream, at a time significantly earlier than expected from simple ballistic back-mapping, with the best-performing in-situ parameter being the solar-wind mass flux. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000481843Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Solar PhysicsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SpringerSubject
Solar-wind, origin; Heliosphere, connection; Coronal hole, observations; Coronal bright point, dynamicsOrganisational unit
02532 - Institut für Teilchen- und Astrophysik / Inst. Particle Physics and Astrophysics09674 - Harra, Louise Kim / Harra, Louise Kim
09674 - Harra, Louise Kim / Harra, Louise Kim
More
Show all metadata