Morphology, dynamics and plasma parameters of plumes and inter-plume regions in solar coronal holes
K. Wilhelm, L. Abbo, F. Auchere, N. Barbey, L. Feng, A.H. Gabriel, S., Giordano, S. Imada, A. Llebaria, W.H. Matthaeus, G. Poletto, N.-E. Raouafi,, S.T. Suess, L. Teriaca, Y.-M. Wang

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent multi-instrument and stereoscopic studies of solar coronal plumes and inter-plume regions, highlighting advances and remaining questions about their physical properties, formation, and contribution to the solar wind.
Contribution
It synthesizes observational results and literature to improve understanding of coronal plume structures, dynamics, and their role in solar wind acceleration.
Findings
Progress in measuring plasma densities and temperatures in plumes
3D reconstructions of plume structures from stereoscopic data
Identification of unresolved questions about plume generation processes
Abstract
Coronal plumes, which extend from solar coronal holes (CH) into the high corona and - possibly - into the solar wind (SW), can now continuously be studied with modern telescopes and spectrometers on spacecraft, in addition to investigations from the ground, in particular, during total eclipses. Despite the large amount of data available on these prominent features and related phenomena, many questions remained unanswered as to their generation and relative contributions to the high-speed streams emanating from CHs. An understanding of the processes of plume formation and evolution requires a better knowledge of the physical conditions at the base of CHs, in plumes and in the surrounding inter-plume regions (IPR). More specifically, information is needed on the magnetic field configuration, the electron densities and temperatures, effective ion temperatures, non-thermal motions, plume…
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