Parameters of the Magnetic Flux inside Coronal Holes
Valentina Abramenko, Vasyl Yurchyshyn, and Hiroko Watanabe

TL;DR
This study analyzes magnetic flux parameters inside low-latitude coronal holes, revealing that magnetic flux density does not correlate with solar wind speed, but area and net flux do, with magnetic complexity playing a key role.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of magnetic flux distribution and complexity in coronal holes, highlighting the importance of small-scale structures in solar wind acceleration.
Findings
Net magnetic flux density does not correlate with solar wind speed.
Coronal hole area and net flux correlate strongly with solar wind speed.
Magnetic complexity at small scales influences energy release and solar wind acceleration.
Abstract
Parameters of magnetic flux distribution inside low-latitude coronal holes (CHs) were analyzed. A statistical study of 44 CHs based on Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)/MDI full disk magnetograms and SOHO/EIT 284\AA images showed that the density of the net magnetic flux, , does not correlate with the associated solar wind speeds, . Both the area and net flux of CHs correlate with the solar wind speed and the corresponding spatial Pearson correlation coefficients are 0.75 and 0.71, respectively. A possible explanation for the low correlation between and is proposed. The observed non-correlation might be rooted in the structural complexity of the magnetic field. As a measure of complexity of the magnetic field, the filling factor, , was calculated as a function of spatial scales. In CHs, was found to be nearly constant at…
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