How the area of solar coronal holes affects the properties of high-speed solar wind streams near Earth -- An analytical model
Stefan Johann Hofmeister, Eleanna Asvestari, Jingnan Guo, Verena, Heidrich-Meisner, Stephan G. Heinemann, Jasmina Magdalenic, Stefaan Poedts,, Evangelia Samara, Manuela Temmer, Susanne Vennerstrom, Astrid Veronig, Bojan, Vr\v{s}nak, Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber

TL;DR
This paper presents an analytical model linking the size of solar coronal holes to the properties of high-speed solar wind streams at Earth, revealing how coronal hole characteristics influence solar wind velocity, temperature, and density.
Contribution
It introduces a simple analytical model that connects coronal hole area and boundary size to solar wind properties near Earth, enhancing understanding of solar wind propagation.
Findings
Velocity plateau at 1 AU originates from the HSS center near the Sun.
Peak HSS velocity at Earth depends on the HSS's longitudinal width near the Sun.
Radial expansion influences the temperature and density relationships of HSS plasma at Earth.
Abstract
We derive a simple analytical model for the propagation of HSSs from the Sun to Earth and thereby show how the area of coronal holes and the size of their boundary regions affect the HSS velocity, temperature, and density near Earth. We presume that velocity, temperature, and density profiles form across the HSS cross section close to the Sun and that these spatial profiles translate into corresponding temporal profiles in a given radial direction due to the solar rotation. These temporal distributions drive the stream interface to the preceding slow solar wind plasma and disperse with distance from the Sun. The HSS properties at 1 AU are then given by all HSS plasma parcels launched from the Sun that did not run into the stream interface at Earth distance. We show that the velocity plateau region of HSSs as seen at 1 AU, if apparent, originates from the center region of the HSS close…
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