Disparity among low first ionization potential elements
Verena Heidrich-Meisner, Lars Berger, and Robert F., Wimmer-Schweingruber

TL;DR
This study examines the variability of the FIP effect among low FIP elements in the solar wind, revealing that Fe behaves differently from Mg and Si, indicating that fractionation is influenced by factors beyond FIP alone.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the FIP effect's dependence on charge state ratios, highlighting differences among low FIP elements and challenging existing fractionation models.
Findings
Fe shows different FIP behavior compared to Mg and Si during solar maximum.
FIP effect for Mg and Si increases with O7+/O6+ ratio, unlike Fe.
Fe's FIP distribution is broader and exhibits a peak, indicating complex fractionation processes.
Abstract
The elemental composition of the solar wind differs from the solar photospheric composition. Elements with low first ionization potential (FIP) appear enhanced compared to O in the solar wind relative to the respective photospheric abundances. This so-called FIP effect is different in the slow solar wind and the coronal hole wind. However, under the same plasma conditions, for elements with similar FIPs such as Mg, Si, and Fe, comparable enhancements are expected. We scrutinize the assumption that the FIP effect is always similar for different low FIP elements, namely Mg, Si, and Fe. We investigate the dependency of the FIP effect of low FIP elements on the O7+/O6+ charge state ratio depending on time and solar wind type. We order the observed FIP ratios with respect to the O7+/O6+ charge state ratio into bins and analyze separately the respective distributions of the FIP ratio of Mg,…
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