Multi-spacecraft Study of the Solar Wind at Solar Minimum: Dependence on Latitude and Transient Outflows
R. Laker, T. S. Horbury, S. D. Bale, L. Matteini, T. Woolley, L. D., Woodham, J. E. Stawarz, E. E. Davies, J. P. Eastwood, M. J. Owens, H., O'Brien, V. Evans, V. Angelini, I. Richter, D. Heyner, C. J. Owen, P. Louarn,, A. Federov

TL;DR
This study uses multiple spacecraft data during solar minimum to analyze how solar wind structure and the Heliospheric Current Sheet vary with latitude, revealing significant latitudinal dependence and transient effects.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-spacecraft analysis of solar wind and HCS morphology at different latitudes during solar minimum, improving understanding of solar wind variability.
Findings
Solar wind structure varies significantly with latitude.
HCS ripples are consistent with model shapes but steepened.
Transient structures can disrupt local HCS orientation for days.
Abstract
The recent launches of Parker Solar Probe (PSP), Solar Orbiter (SO) and BepiColombo, along with several older spacecraft, have provided the opportunity to study the solar wind at multiple latitudes and distances from the Sun simultaneously. We take advantage of this unique spacecraft constellation, along with low solar activity across two solar rotations between May and July 2020, to investigate how the solar wind structure, including the Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS), varies with latitude. We visualise the sector structure of the inner heliosphere by ballistically mapping the polarity and solar wind speed from several spacecraft onto the Sun's source surface. We then assess the HCS morphology and orientation with the in situ data and compare with a predicted HCS shape. We resolve ripples in the HCS on scales of a few degrees in longitude and latitude, finding that the local…
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