On the Relationship between Magnetic Expansion Factor and Observed Speed of the Solar Wind from Coronal Pseudostreamers
Samantha Wallace, Charles N. Arge, Nicholeen M. Viall, Ylva Pihlstrom

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between magnetic expansion factor and solar wind speed from pseudostreamers, finding no significant correlation and suggesting that boundary dynamics affect steady-state acceleration assumptions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis showing the lack of correlation between expansion factor and wind speed in pseudostreamers, challenging previous empirical models.
Findings
Only slow wind is associated with pseudostreamers.
No significant correlation between expansion factor and observed wind speed.
Boundary dynamics like interchange reconnection influence wind acceleration.
Abstract
For the past 30+ years, the magnetic expansion factor () has been used in empirical relationships to predict solar wind speed () at 1 AU, based on an inverse relationship between these two quantities. Coronal unipolar streamers (i.e. pseudostreamers) undergo limited field line expansion, resulting in -dependent relationships to predict fast wind associated with these structures. However, case studies have shown that in situ observed pseudostreamer solar wind was much slower than that derived with . To investigate this further, we conduct a statistical analysis to determine if and are inversely correlated for a large sample of periods when pseudostreamer wind was observed at multiple 1 AU spacecraft (i.e. ACE, STEREO-A/B). We use the Wang-Sheeley-Arge (WSA) model driven by Air Force Data Assimilative Photospheric Flux Transport (ADAPT) photospheric…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
