Statistical analysis of orientation, shape, and size of solar wind switchbacks
Ronan Laker, Timothy S. Horbury, Stuart D. Bale, Lorenzo Matteini,, Thomas Woolley, Lloyd D. Woodham, Samuel T. Badman, Marc Pulupa, Justin C., Kasper, Michael Stevens, Anthony W. Case, Kelly E. Korreck

TL;DR
This study analyzes the shape, size, and orientation of solar wind magnetic switchbacks observed by the Parker Solar Probe, revealing they are long, thin structures aligned with the local Parker spiral, not the flow direction.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed statistical analysis of switchback dimensions and orientations across multiple solar wind streams, highlighting their alignment with the magnetic field rather than flow.
Findings
Switchbacks have a mean width of 50,000 km.
They are aligned along the local Parker spiral.
Duration depends on spacecraft trajectory, not size.
Abstract
One of the main discoveries from the first two orbits of Parker Solar Probe (PSP) was the presence of magnetic switchbacks, whose deflections dominated the magnetic field measurements. Determining their shape and size could provide evidence of their origin, which is still unclear. Previous work with a single solar wind stream has indicated that these are long, thin structures although the direction of their major axis could not be determined. We investigate if this long, thin nature extends to other solar wind streams, while determining the direction along which the switchbacks within a stream were aligned. We try to understand how the size and orientation of the switchbacks, along with the flow velocity and spacecraft trajectory, combine to produce the observed structure durations for past and future orbits. We searched for the alignment direction that produced a combination of a…
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