论文标题
羽流:太阳冠状李子中的动态丝状结构
Plumelets: Dynamic Filamentary Structures in Solar Coronal Plumes
论文作者
论文摘要
太阳冠状羽毛似乎具有简单的几何形状,该几何形状支持空间相干,稳定的流出,而没有明显的精细结构。最近的高分辨率观察结果通过揭示了李子底部的众多短暂的,小规模的流出(“ jetlets”),从而挑战了这一情况。太阳羽流的动态丝状结构在这些流出以上及其与整体羽流结构的关系仍然在很大程度上没有探索。我们分析了2016年7月2日至3日,在中纬度冠状孔内的单个代表性明亮羽流中连续观察到的精细结构的统计数据。通过将先进的边缘增强和时空分析技术应用于太阳能动力学观测站的大气成像组件的扩展一系列高分辨率图像,我们确定羽流是由大量时间不断变化的丝状下部结构组成的,该子结构由“ plumelets”所引用,在本文中,该论文中的大部分是plumume sissions of Plumume Essistion的论文。同时可识别的李子的数量与羽亮度正相关,在完全形成的羽流中达到峰值,此后保持饱和。羽状物的横向宽度为10 mm,间歇性地以190-260 km/s的相位速度向上支撑周期性干扰,纵向波长为55-65 mm。特征频率(3.5 MHz)与太阳P模型的频率相称。相邻羽状物中的振荡是不相关的,表明波浪可以由p模式流驱动,在空间尺度小于李子分离的空间尺度上。单个冠状羽流中的多个独立的流出来源应赋予派克太阳能探针和太阳轨道可以检测到的太阳风的明显优质结构。
Solar coronal plumes long seemed to possess a simple geometry supporting spatially coherent, stable outflow without significant fine structure. Recent high-resolution observations have challenged this picture by revealing numerous transient, small-scale, collimated outflows ("jetlets") at the base of plumes. The dynamic filamentary structure of solar plumes above these outflows, and its relationship with the overall plume structure, have remained largely unexplored. We analyzed the statistics of continuously observed fine structure inside a single representative bright plume within a mid-latitude coronal hole during 2016 July 2-3. By applying advanced edge-enhancement and spatiotemporal analysis techniques to extended series of high-resolution images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly, we determined that the plume was composed of numerous time-evolving filamentary substructures, referred to as "plumelets" in this paper, that accounted for most of the plume emission. The number of simultaneously identifiable plumelets was positively correlated with plume brightness, peaked in the fully formed plume, and remained saturated thereafter. The plumelets had transverse widths of 10 Mm and intermittently supported upwardly propagating periodic disturbances with phase speeds of 190-260 km/s and longitudinal wavelengths of 55-65 Mm. The characteristic frequency (3.5 mHz) is commensurate with that of solar p-modes. Oscillations in neighboring plumelets are uncorrelated, indicating that the waves could be driven by p-mode flows at spatial scales smaller than the plumelet separation. Multiple independent sources of outflow within a single coronal plume should impart significant fine structure to the solar wind that may be detectable by Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter.