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Alfv\'enic Slow Solar Wind Observed in the Inner Heliosphere by Parker Solar Probe

Authors :
Huang, Jia
Kasper, J. C.
Stevens, M.
Vech, D.
Klein, K. G.
Martinović, Mihailo M.
Alterman, B. L.
Jian, Lan K.
Hu, Qiang
Velli, Marco
Horbury, Timothy S.
Lavraud, B.
Parashar, T. N.
Ďurovcová, Tereza
Niembro, Tatiana
Paulson, Kristoff
Hegedus, A.
Bert, C. M.
Holmes, J.
Case, A. W.
Korreck, K. E.
Bale, Stuart D.
Larson, Davin E.
Livi, Roberto
Whittlesey, P.
Pulupa, Marc
de Wit, Thierry Dudok
Malaspina, David M.
MacDowall, Robert J.
Bonnell, John W.
Harvey, Peter R.
Goetz, Keith
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The slow solar wind is typically characterized as having low Alfv\'enicity. However, Parker Solar Probe (PSP) observed predominately Alfv\'enic slow solar wind during several of its initial encounters. From its first encounter observations, about 55.3\% of the slow solar wind inside 0.25 au is highly Alfv\'enic ($|\sigma_C| > 0.7$) at current solar minimum, which is much higher than the fraction of quiet-Sun-associated highly Alfv\'enic slow wind observed at solar maximum at 1 au. Intervals of slow solar wind with different Alfv\'enicities seem to show similar plasma characteristics and temperature anisotropy distributions. Some low Alfv\'enicity slow wind intervals even show high temperature anisotropies, because the slow wind may experience perpendicular heating as fast wind does when close to the Sun. This signature is confirmed by Wind spacecraft measurements as we track PSP observations to 1 au. Further, with nearly 15 years of Wind measurements, we find that the distributions of plasma characteristics, temperature anisotropy and helium abundance ratio ($N_\alpha/N_p$) are similar in slow winds with different Alfv\'enicities, but the distributions are different from those in the fast solar wind. Highly Alfv\'enic slow solar wind contains both helium-rich ($N_\alpha/N_p\sim0.045$) and helium-poor ($N_\alpha/N_p\sim0.015$) populations, implying it may originate from multiple source regions. These results suggest that highly Alfv\'enic slow solar wind shares similar temperature anisotropy and helium abundance properties with regular slow solar winds, and they thus should have multiple origins.<br />Comment: submitted to ApJS, welcome comments

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.12372
Document Type :
Working Paper