Tracking solar wind flows from rapidly varying viewpoints by the Wide-field Imager for Parker Solar Probe
A. Nindos, S. Patsourakos, A. Vourlidas, P. C. Liewer, P. Penteado, J., R. Hall

TL;DR
This paper presents a new methodology for tracking transient solar wind flows from rapidly changing viewpoints using WISPR data from the Parker Solar Probe, enabling detailed analysis of solar wind structures and dynamics.
Contribution
The authors developed a framework to construct and analyze maps of solar wind flows from rapidly varying vantage points, applicable to PSP and future Solar Orbiter data.
Findings
Identified multiple transient solar wind features, including CMEs and streamer blobs.
Measured angular speeds of solar wind features, around 2.3-2.5 degrees/hour.
Estimated radial speeds of 150-300 km/s for tracked solar wind flows.
Abstract
Aims: Our goal is to develop methodologies to seamlessly track transient solar wind flows viewed by coronagraphs or heliospheric imagers from rapidly varying viewpoints. Methods: We constructed maps of intensity versus time and elongation (J-maps) from Parker Solar Probe (PSP) Wide-field Imager (WISPR) observations during the fourth encounter of PSP. From the J-map, we built an intensity on impact-radius-on-Thomson-surface map (R-map). Finally, we constructed a latitudinal intensity versus time map (Lat-map). Our methodology satisfactorily addresses the challenges associated with the construction of such maps from data taken from rapidly varying viewpoint observations. Results: Our WISPR J-map exhibits several tracks, corresponding to transient solar wind flows ranging from a coronal mass ejection (CME) down to streamer blobs. The latter occurrence rate is about 4-5 per day, which…
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