3-Phase Evolution of a Coronal Hole, Part I: 360{\deg} remote sensing and in-situ observations
S.G. Heinemann, M. Temmer, S.J. Hofmeister, A.M. Veronig, S., Vennerstroem

TL;DR
This study tracks a long-lived coronal hole over 10 solar rotations, revealing three distinct evolutionary phases and their impact on solar wind properties at 1 AU through combined remote sensing and in-situ data.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the three-phase evolution of a coronal hole and links atmospheric changes to solar wind variations at 1 AU, using continuous 360-degree observations.
Findings
Coronal hole area increases, peaks, then decreases over months.
Distinct solar wind speed ranges correspond to each phase.
EUV intensity and solar wind velocity are correlated with coronal hole evolution.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of a well-observed, long-lived, low-latitude coronal hole (CH) over 10 solar rotations in the year 2012. By combining EUV imagery from STEREO-A/B and SDO we are able to track and study the entire evolution of the CH having a continuous 360 coverage of the Sun. The remote sensing data are investigated together with in-situ solar wind plasma and magnetic field measurements from STEREO-A/B, ACE and WIND. From this we obtain how different evolutionary states of the CH as observed in the solar atmosphere (changes in EUV intensity and area) affect the properties of the associated high-speed stream measured at AU. Most distinctly pronounced for the CH area, three development phases are derived: a) growing, b) maximum, and c) decaying phase. During these phases the CH area a) increases over a duration of around three months from about $1 \cdot 10^{10}…
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