Flows and Non-thermal Velocities in Solar Active Regions Observed with the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer on Hinode: A Tracer of Active Region Sources of Heliospheric Magnetic Fields?
G. A. Doschek, H. P. Warren, J. T. Mariska, K. Muglach, J. L. Culhane,, H. Hara, T Watanabe

TL;DR
This study uses Hinode/EIS observations to identify persistent outflows in solar active regions, linking them to non-thermal velocities and magnetic field structures, suggesting they may contribute to the solar wind.
Contribution
First detailed analysis connecting active region outflows with non-thermal velocities and magnetic field configurations using Hinode/EIS data.
Findings
Active regions exhibit large, persistent outflows of 20-50 km/s.
Outflows are correlated with increased non-thermal velocities in coronal plasma.
Outflow regions have low electron densities around 7×10^8 cm^-3.
Abstract
From Doppler velocity maps of active regions constructed from spectra obtained by the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) on the Hinode spacecraft we observe large areas of outflow (20-50 km/s) that can persist for at least a day. These outflows occur in areas of active regions that are faint in coronal spectral lines formed at typical quiet Sun and active region temperatures. The outflows are positively correlated with non-thermal velocities in coronal plasmas. The bulk mass motions and non-thermal velocities are derived from spectral line centroids and line widths, mostly from a strong line of Fe XII at 195.12 Angstroms. The electron temperature of the outflow regions estimated from an Fe XIII to Fe XII line intensity ratio is about 1.2-1.4 MK. The electron density of the outflow regions derived from a density sensitive intensity ratio of Fe XII lines is rather low for an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
