Magnetic Influences on the Solar Wind (Ph.D. Dissertation)
Lauren N. Woolsey

TL;DR
This dissertation investigates how magnetic fields and Alfven wave-driven turbulent heating influence solar wind acceleration and properties, combining theoretical modeling, simulations, and observational analysis.
Contribution
It advances understanding of solar wind acceleration by analyzing magnetic field profiles, time-dependent wave heating, and observational data of chromospheric jets.
Findings
Magnetic field profiles significantly affect wind acceleration.
Time-dependent Alfven wave heating produces bursty energy input.
Observations of network jets correlate with magnetic thresholds.
Abstract
The steady, supersonic outflow from the Sun we call the solar wind was first posited in the 1950s and initial theories rightly linked the acceleration of the wind to the existence of the million-degree solar corona. Still today, the wind acceleration mechanisms and the coronal heating processes remain unsolved challenges in solar physics. In this work, I seek to answer a portion of the mystery by focusing on a particular acceleration process: Alfven waves launched by the motion of magnetic field footpoints in the photosphere. The entire corona is threaded with magnetic loops and flux tubes that open up into the heliosphere. I have sought a better understanding of the role these magnetic fields play in determining solar wind properties in open flux tubes. After an introduction of relevant material, I discuss my parameter study of magnetic field profiles and the statistical understanding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
