Elemental Abundances in the Fast Solar Wind Emanating from Chromospheric Funnels
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6160Date
2010Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
We carry out a model study to determine whether a funnel-type flow geometry in the solar wind source region leads to sufficiently fast hydrogen flow to offset heavy element gravitational settling and can thus explain why solar wind abundances are not much smaller than photospheric abundances. We find that high first ionization potential (FIP) elements are more susceptible to gravitational settling than low-FIP elements, which are pulled up by Coulomb drag from protons, and hence the settling is more sensitive to the charge state of the elements than to their mass. Abundances at the top of the chromosphere, and hence solar wind abundances, can change by many orders of magnitude when the funnel areal expansion factor is changed by a small amount. The observed solar wind neon abundance provides the most severe constraint on the expansion, requiring a total flux tube expansion factor of at least 30-40.
Publisher
University of Chicago PressCitation
The Astrophysical Journal 709(2010) nr. 2 s. 993-1002Metadata
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