Tracking Solar Active Region Outflow Plasma from its Source to the near-Earth Environment
J.L. Culhane, D.H. Brooks, L. van Driel-Gesztelyi, P. Demoulin, D., Baker, M.L. DeRosa, C.H. Mandrini, L. Zhao, T.H. Zurbuchen

TL;DR
This study investigates whether plasma from active region upflows contributes to the slow solar wind by analyzing plasma properties, magnetic topology, and in-situ solar wind data, proposing a reconnection process for plasma escape.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis linking active region upflows to slow solar wind, including a proposed two-step reconnection mechanism for plasma escape.
Findings
Active region upflows show plasma properties similar to slow solar wind.
In-situ ACE data indicates plasma signatures consistent with active region origin.
A two-step reconnection process may enable plasma from closed magnetic fields to reach the heliosphere.
Abstract
Seeking to establish whether active region upflow material contributes to the slow solar wind, we examine in detail the plasma upflows from Active Region (AR)10978, which crossed the Sun's disc in the interval 8 to 16 December, 2007 during Carrington rotation (CR)2064. In previous work, using data from the Hinode/EUV Imaging Spectrometer, upflow velocity evolution was extensively studied as the region crossed the disc while a linear force-free magnetic extrapolation was used to confirm aspects of the velocity evolution and to establish the presence of quasi-separatrix layers at the upflow source areas. The plasma properties, temperature, density and first ionisation potential bias (FIP-bias) were measured with the spectrometer during the disc passage of the active region. Global potential field source surface (PFSS) models showed that AR 10978 was completely covered by the closed field…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
