Physical properties of solar polar jets: A statistical study with Hinode XRT data
A. R. Paraschiv, A. Bemporad, and A. C. Sterling

TL;DR
This study analyzes the physical properties of solar polar jets using Hinode XRT data, revealing their energy contributions, temperature, density, and potential role in coronal heating and solar wind acceleration.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of polar jet properties, including energy estimates and their implications for coronal heating and solar wind contribution.
Findings
Thermal energy dominates the energy budget of jets.
Kinetic energy is generally lower than thermal energy.
Fainter jets tend to be hotter, possibly underestimating their role in heating.
Abstract
The target of this work is to investigate the physical nature of polar jets in the solar corona and their possible contribution to coronal heating and solar wind flow based on the analysis of X-ray images acquired by the Hinode XRT telescope. We estimate the different forms of energy associated with many of these small-scale eruptions, in particular the kinetic energy and enthalpy. Two Hinode XRT campaign datasets focusing on the two polar coronal holes were selected to analyze the physical properties of coronal jets; the analyzed data were acquired using a series of three XRT filters. Typical kinematical properties (e.g., length, thickness, lifetime, ejection rate, and velocity) of 18 jets are evaluated from the observed sequences, thus providing information on their possible contribution to the fast solar wind flux escaping from coronal holes. Electron temperatures and densities of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
