4.3 Article

Coronal Sources and In Situ Properties of the Solar Winds Sampled by ACE During 1999-aEuroparts per thousand2008

Journal

SOLAR PHYSICS
Volume 290, Issue 5, Pages 1399-1415

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11207-015-0689-9

Keywords

Solar Wind, sources; Solar wind, properties; Solar cycle

Funding

  1. China 973 program [2012CB825601]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41174154, 41274176, 41274178]
  3. Ministry of Education of China [20110131110058, NCET-11-0305]
  4. International Space Science Institute (ISSI)
  5. NASA

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We identify the coronal sources of the solar winds sampled by the ACE spacecraft during 1999 -aEuro parts per thousand 2008 and examine the in situ solar wind properties as a function of wind sources. The standard two-step mapping technique is adopted to establish the photospheric footpoints of the magnetic flux tubes along which the ACE winds flow. The footpoints are then placed in the context of EIT 284 images and photospheric magnetograms, allowing us to categorize the sources into four groups: coronal holes (CHs), active regions (ARs), the quiet Sun (QS), and undefined. This practice also enables us to establish the response to solar activity of the fractions occupied by each type of solar wind, and of their speeds and O7+/O6+ ratios measured in situ. We find that during the maximum phase, the majority of ACE winds originate from ARs. During the declining phase, CHs and ARs are equally important contributors to the ACE solar winds. The QS contribution increases with decreasing solar activity and maximizes in the minimum phase when the QS appears to be the primary supplier of the ACE winds. With decreasing activity, the winds from all sources tend to become cooler, as represented by the increasingly low O7+/O6+ ratios. On the other hand, during each activity phase, the AR winds tend to be the slowest and are associated with the highest O7+/O6+ ratios, while the CH winds correspond to the other extreme, with the QS winds lying in between. Applying the same analysis method to the slow winds alone, here defined as the winds with speeds lower than 500 km s(-1), we find basically the same overall behavior, as far as the contributions of individual groups of sources are concerned. This statistical study indicates that QS regions are an important source of the solar wind during the minimum phase.

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