Stirring the Base of the Solar Wind: On Heat Transfer and Vortex Formation
Adam J. Finley, Sacha A. Brun, Mats Carlsson, Mikolaj Szydlarski,, Viggo Hansteen, and Munehito Shoda

TL;DR
This study uses advanced Bifrost simulations to analyze small-scale magnetic and plasma dynamics in the solar atmosphere, revealing how photospheric flows generate Alfvén waves and magnetic braiding that influence solar wind acceleration and turbulence.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed quantification of the magnetic and wave dynamics at the base of the solar wind using realistic 3D simulations.
Findings
Coronal magnetic fields are braided and twisted by photospheric flows.
Torsional Alfvén waves are generated and transmitted along magnetic structures.
Magnetic and plasma contrasts are formed by active stirring motions.
Abstract
Current models of the solar wind must approximate (or ignore) the small-scale dynamics within the solar atmosphere, however these are likely important in shaping the emerging wave-turbulence spectrum and ultimately heating/accelerating the coronal plasma. The Bifrost code produces realistic simulations of the solar atmosphere that facilitate the analysis of spatial and temporal scales which are currently at, or beyond, the limit of modern solar telescopes. For this study, the Bifrost simulation is configured to represent the solar atmosphere in a coronal hole region, from which the fast solar wind emerges. The simulation extends from the upper-convection zone (2.5 Mm below the photosphere) to the low-corona (14.5 Mm above the photosphere), with a horizontal extent of 24 Mm x 24 Mm. The twisting of the coronal magnetic field by photospheric flows, efficiently injects energy into the…
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