The Contribution of Alpha Particles to the Solar Wind Angular Momentum Flux in the Inner Heliosphere
Adam J. Finley, Michael D. McManus, Sean P. Matt, Justin C. Kasper,, Kelly E. Korreck, Anthony W. Case, Michael L. Stevens, Phyllis Whittlesey,, Davin Larson, Roberto Livi, Stuart D. Bale, Thierry Dudok de Wit, Keith, Goetz, Peter R. Harvey, Robert J. MacDowall

TL;DR
This study uses Parker Solar Probe data to quantify the alpha particle contribution to the solar wind's angular momentum flux, revealing it accounts for 10-20% of the total and highlighting the importance of proton beam effects.
Contribution
First measurement of alpha particle angular momentum flux in the solar wind using PSP data, including the proton beam contribution, enhancing understanding of solar wind angular momentum transport.
Findings
Alpha particles carry about 20% of the solar wind's angular momentum flux.
Proton beams contribute 10-50% of proton angular momentum flux.
Alpha particle contribution increases the estimated solar wind angular momentum loss by 10-20%.
Abstract
An accurate assessment of the Sun's angular momentum (AM) loss rate is an independent constraint for models that describe the rotation evolution of Sun-like stars. In-situ measurements of the solar wind taken by Parker Solar Probe (PSP), at radial distances of , are used to constrain the solar wind AM-loss rate. For the first time with PSP, this includes a measurement of the alpha particle contribution. The mechanical AM flux in the solar wind protons (core and beam), and alpha particles, is determined as well as the transport of AM through stresses in the interplanetary magnetic field. The solar wind AM flux is averaged over three hour increments, so that our findings more accurately represent the bulk flow. During the third and fourth perihelion passes of PSP, the alpha particles contain around a fifth of the mechanical AM flux in the solar wind (the rest is…
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