North-South asymmetry in the magnetic deflection of polar coronal hole jets
Giuseppe Nistico', Gaetano Zimbardo, Spiros Patsourakos, Volker, Bothmer, Valery M. Nakariakov

TL;DR
This study investigates the North-South asymmetry in the magnetic deflection of polar coronal hole jets, revealing a significant magnetic field asymmetry that influences jet trajectories during solar minimum.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of magnetic field asymmetry using jet deflections, incorporating a magnetic field model with quadrupole and esapole components.
Findings
Jet deflections are 25-40% larger in the North than in the South.
The magnetic field model suggests a non-negligible quadrupole moment.
The asymmetry aligns with a southward deflection of the heliospheric current sheet.
Abstract
Measurements of the magnetic field in the interplanetary medium, of the sunspots area, and of the heliospheric current sheet position, reveal a possible North-South asymmetry in the magnetic field of the Sun. We study the North-South asymmetry as inferred from measurements of the deflection of polar coronal hole jets when they propagate throughout the corona. Since the corona is an environment where the magnetic pressure is greater than the kinetic pressure, we can assume that magnetic field controls the dynamics of plasma. On average, jets during their propagation follow the magnetic field lines, highlighting its local direction. The average jet deflection is studied both in the plane perpendicular to the line of sight, and, for a reduced number of jets, in three dimensional space. The observed jet deflection is studied in terms of an axisymmetric magnetic field model comprising dipole…
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