Three-dimensional Evolution of Solar Wind during Solar Cycles 22-24
P.K. Manoharan

TL;DR
This study analyzes the 3D evolution of solar wind turbulence and speed across solar cycles 22-24 using IPS data, revealing significant changes in turbulence, wind speed distribution, and solar activity patterns.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the 3D evolution of solar wind properties during multiple solar cycles, highlighting changes in turbulence and wind speed distribution linked to solar magnetic activity.
Findings
Density turbulence decreased from cycle 22 maximum to cycle 23 minimum.
Coronal scattering diameter shrank by ~50% between maximum and minimum.
Latitudinal distribution of solar wind speed varied between cycles 22 and 23 minima.
Abstract
This paper presents the analysis of 3D evolution of solar wind density turbulence and speed at various levels of solar activity between solar cycles 22 and 24. The solar wind data has been obtained from interplanetary scintillation (IPS) measurements made at the Ooty Radio Telescope. Results show that (i) on the average, there was a downward trend in density turbulence from the maximum of cycle 22 to the deep minimum phase of cycle 23; (2) the scattering diameter of the corona around the Sun shrunk steadily towards the Sun, starting from 2003 to the smallest size at the deepest minimum, and it corresponded to a reduction of ~50% in density turbulence between maximum and minimum phases of cycle 23; (3) The latitudinal distribution of solar wind speed was significantly different between minima of cycles 22 and 23. At the minimum phase of solar cycle 22, when the underlying solar magnetic…
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