Abstract
The 3D structure of the solar wind and its evolution in time are needed for heliospheric modeling and interpretation of energetic neutral atoms observations. We present a model to retrieve the solar wind structure in heliolatitude and time using all available and complementary data sources. We determine the heliolatitude structure of solar wind speed on a yearly time grid over the past 1.5 solar cycles based on remote-sensing observations of interplanetary scintillations, in situ out-of-ecliptic measurements from Ulysses, and in situ in-ecliptic measurements from the OMNI 2 database. Since in situ out-of-ecliptic information on the solar wind density structure is not available apart from the Ulysses data, we derive correlation formulae between the solar wind speed and density and use the information on the solar wind speed from interplanetary scintillation observations to retrieve the 3D structure of the solar wind density. With the variations of solar wind density and speed in time and heliolatitude available, we calculate variations in solar wind flux, dynamic pressure, and charge-exchange rate in the approximation of stationary H atoms.
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1 Introduction
The goal of this paper is to retrieve the solar wind structure at 1 AU as a function of time and heliolatitude based on available in situ data sources and interplanetary scintillation observations for the time interval since 1990 until present that covers 1.5 solar activity cycles.
The existence of the solar wind was predicted on a theoretical basis by Parker (1958) and discovered experimentally by Lunnik II and Mariner 2 at the very beginning of the space age (Gringauz et al. 1960; Neugebauer and Snyder 1962). Regular measurements of its parameters began in the early 1960s, and data from many spacecraft are now available, obtained using various observation and data processing techniques (see for review Bzowski et al. 2012). Shortly after the discovery of the solar wind (SW hereafter), the question of whether or not it is spherically symmetric was put forward. Most spacecraft with instruments to measure the SW parameters are at orbits close to the ecliptic plane, making information about the latitudinal structure of the SW hard to obtain. There are a few sources of data on the out-of-ecliptic SW parameters, but only one of them from in situ measurements, namely from Ulysses.
While direct observations of the SW in the ecliptic plane have been collected for many years, information on its latitudinal structure had been available only from indirect observations of the cometary ion tails (Brandt, Harrington, and Roosen 1975), until radio astronomy observations of interplanetary scintillation (Hewish, Scott, and Wills 1964; Coles and Maagoe 1972) and spaceborne measurements of the Lyman-α helioglow (Lallement, Bertaux, and Kurt 1985; Bertaux et al. 1995) became available. To our knowledge these two techniques remain the only source of global, time-resolved information on the solar wind structure. The launch of the Ulysses spacecraft (Wenzel et al. 1989) improved our understanding of the three-dimensional (3D) behavior of the solar wind by offering direct in situ observations and a very high resolution in latitude, but a poor resolution in time.Footnote 1
The solar wind structure varies in latitude with the solar activity cycle. A knowledge of its evolution is needed to construct credible models of the heliosphere and its boundary regions. With the history of the SW evolution based on a homogeneous series of data and retrieved using a homogeneous analysis method, one obtains a tool both to interpret present heliospheric observations, such as the ongoing measurements of energetic neutral atoms (ENAs) by the NASA Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX, McComas et al. 2009) and in situ measurements of the heliospheric environment by the Voyagers, and also to compare them with the results from past and current long-lived experiments, such as Solar Wind ANisotropy (SWAN) onboard the SOlar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).
We assume that the solar wind expansion is purely radial, its speed does not change with solar distance, and its density drops down quadratically with distance from the Sun. These assumptions are valid for close distances from the Sun (r<10 AU), and their validity at farther distances will be considered in the Discussion section.
In the following text “CR-averaged” data mean Carrington rotation (CR hereafter) averaged values, where the Carrington rotation period is the synodic period of solar rotation equal to 27.2753 days (Fränz and Harper 2002). Throughout the paper, “adjusted” means scaled from the value x 0 measured at a heliocentric distance r 0 to the distance r E=1 AU, where the value specific for r E is calculated as x E=x 0(r 0/r E)2.
2 Datasets Used
In our studies we use three complementary data sources: in situ in-ecliptic measurements from various spacecraft combined in the OMNI 2 collection, in situ out-of-ecliptic measurements of solar wind plasma by Ulysses, and remote-sensing radio observations of interplanetary scintillations (IPSs), interpreted using the computer assisted tomography (CAT) technique.
2.1 In situ In-ecliptic Measurements Collected from Various Spacecraft
The solar wind (SW) in the ecliptic plane (which differs from the solar equatorial plane by 7.25∘) is a mixture of a “genuine” slow SW, fast SW from coronal holes, SW plasma from stream-stream interaction regions, and (intermittently) interplanetary coronal mass ejections. The features of these components change with solar activity.
The parameters of the SW vary with the phases of the solar cycle (SC hereafter) and, as recently discovered by McComas et al. (2008), also secularly. The OMNI 2 data collection, available at http://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/ (see King and Papitashvili 2005), gathers SW measurements from the early 1960s until the present and brings them to a common calibration. The absolute calibration of the current version of the OMNI 2 collection is based on the absolute calibration of Wind measurements (Kasper et al. 2006).
Nowadays the main source of data comes from the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) and the Wind spacecraft. Before the Wind era, the main data source was measurements from Interplanetary Monitoring Platform-8 (IMP-8), with gaps filled by miscellaneous spacecraft. The data from the epoch before IMP-8 are from various experiments and could not be reliably brought to a common calibration with the IMP-8/Wind system because of the lack of overlap between the measurement time intervals. Our analysis starts in 1985, when IMP-8 was already in operation (see also the review by Bzowski et al. 2012).
The SW parameters show considerable variations during one solar rotation period, with quasi-periodic changes from slow to fast SW speed and related changes in density. The time scale of the changes of the fast/slow wind streams is comparable to the solar rotation period; thus constructing a full and accurate model of the SW variation as a function of time and heliolongitude is currently not feasible because of the lack of sufficient data.
Here in our analysis, we average out heliolongitude variations. We start from the hourly values of SW density and speed available in the OMNI 2 collection, and we construct a time series of CR-averaged parameters of the SW with the grid points set precisely at halves of the CR intervals. Small deviations of the averaged times from the halves of the rotation periods are linearly interpolated. Thus, we develop an equally spaced time series of the SW in-ecliptic densities adjusted to 1 AU and the speeds, which are presented in Figures 1 and 2, respectively. From these series we obtain a time series of SW flux calculated as the product of speed and density, shown in Figure 3.
The time interval shown in Figures 1, 2, and 3 starts before the solar maximum in 1990 and includes the solar minima in 1995 and 2008, as well as the maximum in 2001. Neither the density nor the speed in the ecliptic plane seems to be correlated with solar activity. The density features a secular change (McComas et al. 2008), which began just before the last solar maximum and leveled off shortly before the present minimum. The overall drop in the average SW density is on the order of 30 %.
During the last 20 years we can see three phases of the SW density changes: until 1998 the normal values phase, when the average number density was ∼ 8 cm−3 (approximately equal to the average value since the beginning of observations), then between 1998 and 2002 a phase of rapid decrease that seems to be correlated with the ascending phase of solar activity during SC 23, and finally a phase of low density, with an average number density reduced to ∼ 5.5 cm−3, which lasts until the present. These phases are marked with vertical lines in Figure 1. The horizontal lines indicate the average values before and after the drop.
The density fluctuations are generally anticorrelated with speed fluctuations, and within the low values phase they are smaller in magnitude than those in the phase before 1998. These can be associated with the persistence of coronal holes at equatorial latitudes, as convincingly illustrated by de Toma (2011).
The changes in solar wind flux adjusted to 1 AU are the most pronounced of all the discussed parameters. The steady and slow decrease that started after 1995 seems to continue to the present despite an eight-year plateau between 1999 and 2007 (see Figure 3). The changes in flux are of the order of 40 % from the average calculated from the data interval between 1985 and 1995 to the average calculated from the interval 2008.2 – 2011.5.
The three phases in the solar wind flux corresponding to the phases pointed out in the discussion of the density variations have different time boundaries; they are marked with horizontal and vertical lines in Figure 3 in analogy with Figure 1. The speed shows multi-time-scale variations, but its average value seems to be basically constant in time apart from the last two to three years, when a small drop of ∼ 3 % is observed (McComas et al. 2008). In Figure 2 we indicate only the two time intervals with a small decrease in SW speed that are common in time with the lowest part of the solar activity in 1997 and 2008.
2.2 In situ Out-of-Ecliptic Ulysses Measurements
Ulysses, launched in October 1990, was the first and only spacecraft that traversed regions of the heliosphere close to the solar poles, and it provided unique samples of the SW. Its orbit was nearly polar, with aphelion of ∼ 5.5 AU and perihelion of ∼ 1.4 AU, in a plane almost perpendicular to the ecliptic and the solar equator. The period of the orbit was about six years, with a fast scan (from south to north pole through perihelion), which lasted about one year, and a slow scan (from north to south pole through aphelion), which lasted about five years.
The heliolatitude track of Ulysses is shown in Figure 4, with superimposed Earth heliolatitude position and a solar activity graph represented by the F 10.7 cm flux (Covington 1969; Tapping 1987; Svalgaard and Hudson 2010). The heliocentric distance of Ulysses for one complete orbit is shown in Figure 5. The spacecraft was launched during the solar maximum conditions, and during its 20-year life it observed the Sun during the whole solar cycle and further until the last prolonged solar minimum.
The discoveries and findings from the plasma measurements by the Solar Wind Observations Over the Poles of the Sun (SWOOPS) experiment on Ulysses (Bame et al. 1992) can be found in many papers (see, e.g., Phillips et al. 1995; Marsden and Smith 1997; McComas et al. 2000). They include the bimodal structure of the solar wind (McComas et al. 1998), which is fast and uniform at mid and high heliolatitudes and more variable, slower, and denser at lower heliolatitudes during low activity of the solar cycle. During solar activity maximum the SW is highly variable at all heliolatitudes, with interleaved flows of slow and fast wind (McComas et al. 2003).
Detailed studies of the fast SW parameters presented by McComas et al. (2000) revealed latitudinal gradients in proton speed and density of flows from polar coronal holes. These gradients are equal to ∼ 1 km s−1 deg−1 and ∼ − 0.02 cm−3 deg−1, respectively. Ulysses measurements also confirm the existence of the secular changes in SW parameters reported by in-ecliptic spacecraft. McComas et al. (2008) showed that the global SW exhibits a slight reduction in speed (∼ 3 %), but a much greater one in proton density (∼ 17 %) and dynamic pressure (∼ 22 %). This result was demonstrated simultaneously at low and high latitudes, allowing these authors to conclude that the variations were truly global. It was also recorded that the band of the slow SW variability extended to a higher latitude during the last Ulysses orbit (see McComas et al. 2006) than during the first one. Ebert et al. (2009) reported that above ± 36∘ heliolatitude the spatial and radial variability in SW parameters remain consistent and relatively small, indicating that the fast SW plasma flows from the polar coronal holes are steady and uniform.
Ulysses found that the heliolatitude structure of the SW during the two solar minima was largely similar (see Figure 6), featuring an equatorial enhancement in density with the associated reduction in velocity (the slow wind region), and that during solar maximum the slow wind and fast wind from small coronal holes exist at all heliolatitudes (see also the middle panel in Figure 8). However, the region of slow wind seems to have reached a higher heliolatitude during the last solar minimum than during the minimum of 1995, which is much less conspicuous in density (see Figure 6).
Here we study the latitudinal variation of solar wind parameters based mostly on the fast latitude scans to avoid possible convolution of heliolatitude, time, and heliocentric distance effects. We leave the data from the slow scans, which covered almost five years each (i.e., almost half of a solar cycle) for verification of the derived model. Two of the three fast scans (the first and the third one) occurred during the descending phase of solar activity and the middle one during the solar maximum conditions (see Figure 4). During the fast scans Ulysses was close to the Sun (see Figure 5), so possible distance-related effects in the SW are small, in contrast to the slow scans, for which distance-related effects may be significant (Ebert et al. 2009).
The evolution of SW speed and adjusted density and flux obtained by Ulysses during the fast latitude scans are compiled in Figure 6, where the parameter values are averaged over 10-degree bins in heliolatitude.
2.3 Remote-sensing Observations of Interplanetary Scintillations
Interplanetary scintillation is the phenomenon of producing diffraction patterns on an observer’s plane by the interferencing radio waves from a remote compact radio source (like a quasar) that are scattered by electron density irregularities (fluctuations) in the SW (see, e.g., Hewish, Scott, and Wills 1964; Coles and Kaufman 1978; Kojima and Kakinuma 1990; Kojima et al. 1998, 2007). The scintillation signal is a sum of waves scattered along the line of sight (LOS) to the observed radio source. Most of the scattering occurs at the closest distances to the Sun (called the P point, see Figure 7) along the LOS. This happens because the absolute magnitude of the electron density fluctuations, which are approximately proportional to the electron absolute density, rapidly decreases with solar distance (Coles and Maagoe 1972). The IPS observations are LOS integrated, and to provide reliable information on the SW speed they have to be deconvolved.
The magnitude of electron density fluctuations at a given solar distance is correlated with the magnitude of the local SW speed. Thus, by inferring the level of electron density fluctuations from IPS observations, one can estimate the local speed of the SW (Hewish, Scott, and Wills 1964; Jackson et al. 1997, 2003; Kojima et al. 1998). However, one needs a formula that links the electron density fluctuations δn e with the SW speed v. Usually, a relation δn e∝v γ is used. The index γ has to be established empirically. This analysis was performed for various SW conditions by Asai et al. (1998).
Observations performed using a system of several radio antennas that are longitudinally distributed on the Earth allow us to infer very detailed information on the structure of the SW both inside and outside the ecliptic plane (Coles and Rickett 1976; Tokumaru, Kojima, and Fujiki 2010). The computer assisted tomography (CAT) technique seems best suited to that purpose (Jackson et al. 1998, 2003; Kojima et al. 1998, 2007; Hick and Jackson 2001).
The accuracy of the LOS deconvolution depends on i) geometrical considerations (e.g., the geographical latitude of the telescopes, the tilt of the ecliptic to the solar equator), ii) the number of observations available, and iii) the fidelity of the correlation formula between SW electron density fluctuations and speed. While correlating these quantities was possible early for the equatorial SW (Harmon 1975), the out-of-ecliptic IPS measurements could only be calibrated when in situ data from Ulysses became available (Kojima et al. 2001). This calibration should be repeated separately for each solar cycle, because the SW features secular changes, as discussed earlier in this paper. Still, even before the introduction of the CAT technique, the IPS observations suggested (e.g., Kojima and Kakinuma 1987) that the SW structure varies with solar activity, with high speeds in the polar regions during low solar activity and with slow wind expansion to polar regions when the activity is high. This lends credibility to the IPS technique as a source of information on the global heliolatitude structure of SW speed.
An extensive program of IPS observations, initiated in the 1980s in the Solar-Terrestrial Environment Laboratory (STEL) at Nagoya University in Japan (Kojima and Kakinuma 1990), resulted in a homogeneous data set that spans almost three solar cycles. This data set enables detailed studies of the evolution of the SW speed profile with changes in solar activity (Kojima and Kakinuma 1987; Kojima et al. 1999, 2001, 2007; Fujiki et al. 2003a, 2003b, 2003c; Tokumaru et al. 2009, Tokumaru, Kojima, and Fujiki 2010).
In the analysis we used data from 1990 to 2011, obtained from the tomography processing of observations from three antennas (Toyokawa, Fuji, and Sugadaira), and also from another antenna (Kiso) since 1994. The four-antenna system was operated until 2005, when the Toyokawa antenna was closed (Tokumaru, Kojima, and Fujiki 2010); since then the system again was operated in a three-antenna setup. We did not use the data collected in 2010, because the number of observations available was too small to obtain a reliable result on SW speed structure from the CAT analysis. Since 2011 the STEL IPS observations are again regular with the updated multi-station system.
The IPS data from STEL are typically collected on a daily basis during ∼ 11 CRs per year: there is a break in winter because the antennas become covered with snow. Each day, 30 – 40 LOSs for selected scintillating radio sources are observed. The LOSs are projected on the source surface at 2.5 solar radii, which is used as a reference surface in the time-sequence tomography.
The latitude coverage of the sky by the time-sequence IPS observations is not uniform; it is strongly correlated with the Sun’s position on the sky, which changes during the year, and with the target distribution on the sky. Relatively few of them are located near solar poles, because the polar regions are only a small portion of the sky (see Figure 7). Additionally, the observations of the south pole are of lower quality than those of the north pole because of the low elevation of the Sun during winter in Japan. The original latitude coverage was improved by the new antenna added to the system in 1994 and by optimization of the choice of the targets.
Thus, the accuracy of the remote-sensing measurements of SW speed decreases with latitude because of geometry. The polar values are the most uncertain (and possibly biased), because the signal in the polar LOSs is only partly formed in the actual polar region of space, which can be understood from the sketch presented in Figure 7.
2.4 Comparison of IPS Solar Wind Speed Profiles with Ulysses Data
To verify the results obtained from the IPS CAT analysis, we compared them with the data from the three Ulysses fast latitude scans. The Ulysses speed profiles used for this comparison were constructed from subsets of hourly averages available from the National Space Science Data Center of NASA (NSSDC), split into identical 10-degree heliolatitude bins and averaged. They are shown in Figure 8 in red. Since the acquisition of the Ulysses profiles took one year each and the first and second scan straddle the break of the calendar year, we show the IPS results for the years straddling the fast latitude scans; they are presented in blue and gray in Figure 8.
Generally the IPS and Ulysses profiles agree quite well. The sawtooth feature in the Ulysses profiles from the second fast scan and in the equatorial part of the first and third fast scans is due to the short time that Ulysses was sampling the 10-degree bins. The fast scans were performed within the perihelion part of the Ulysses elliptical orbit, with the perihelion close to the solar equatorial plane. Hence, the angular speed of its motion was highest close to the equator, and traversing the 10-degree bin took it less than one solar rotation period (see Figure 9). Thus the sawtooth is an effect of incomplete Carrington longitude coverage of the bimodal solar wind by Ulysses, with slow wind interleaved with fast wind streams.
Near the poles the angular speed was slower and it took more than 1 CR to scan the 10-degree bin. Thus, when the slow wind engulfed the whole space, the sawtooth effect expanded into the full heliolatitude span. By contrast, during the low activity scans the SW speed at high latitude was stable, which resulted in the lack of the small-scale latitude variations in the CR averages at high latitudes, despite the uneven heliolongitude coverage (see Figure 9).
The IPS yearly averages do not show the short-scale latitudinal variability of the SW speed seen in the Ulysses data (the sawtooth feature) presented in Figure 8, because this variability was smoothed by averaging over multiple full CRs, with the alternating fast/slow streams averaged out.
The difference between the blue and gray lines in the top and middle panels of Figure 8 is a measure of true variation of the latitudinal profile of SW speed during one year. Ulysses was going from south to north during the fast latitude scans (see Figure 4), so the south limb of the profile from Ulysses ought to be closer to the southern limb of the blue profile obtained from the IPS analysis, while the north limb of the Ulysses profile should agree better with the north limb of the gray IPS profile. Indeed, an almost perfect agreement is observed in the second panel, corresponding to solar maximum. In our opinion, this is a very interesting observation, because it i) shows how rapidly the latitude structure of the SW varies during the maximum of solar activity, ii) confirms the credibility of IPS results for SW structure, and iii) confirms that interplanetary scintillation observations deconvolved by CAT algorithms reconstruct the SW structure in very good agreement with in situ measurements.
Originally, the interpretation of the speed profiles obtained from Ulysses was not clear; it was pondered whether the north hemispheric increase in SW speed was a long-standing feature of the SW or just a time variability of the wind at the north pole. Similarly, the question arose whether IPS was able to credibly reproduce the SW profiles given the fact that some of the profiles obtained approximately at the time of the fast scan seemed to disagree with the in situ data (especially the first fast scan). The challenging question was: Which data were more reliable for the yearly profile, those from Ulysses that measured features only from the point of the solar surface from which they came, or the yearly profiles from IPS observations that reveal the full-surface variations in time?
The Ulysses data are challenging to interpret in this respect. The fast scans give information on the solar structure from the south to north pole almost in one year, but the scans are so fast that the longitudinal variation is convolved with the latitudinal structure (see Figure 9). On the other hand, the slow scans take so long (nearly half of a solar cycle) that the parameters obtained for different heliolatitude bands may differ not only because of a heliolatitudinal structuring of the SW, but also because of possible time variations of this structure. Without an independent insight one is unable to distinguish the two.
Furthermore, the Ulysses heliocentric distances during the fast and slow scans are different (see Figure 5). During the fast scans the distance does not change very much (from 2.2 AU near the poles to 1.4 AU in the ecliptic), so possible distance-related effects are not pronounced, but during the slow scans, when the distance changes are much greater, one cannot deconvolve the variation connected with the distance and those related to heliolatitude and/or time without a credible MHD model of the solar wind behavior between the Sun and the spacecraft. The IPS data provide us with the much-wanted information on all heliolatitudes simultaneously over one year.
The IPS data are in very good agreement with OMNI 2 in the ecliptic (see the blue and green lines of the corresponding yearly averages in Figure 10). Also the agreement between the Ulysses measurements obtained from the two CRs during the passages of 0∘ heliolatitude at aphelion and the OMNI 2 data is almost perfect (cf. the red diamonds in Figure 10), which is clearly seen for the passages in 1998 and 2004. The apparent discrepancy in 1991 is a result of a fluctuation, as explained in Figure 11, which presents the Ulysses hourly time series compared with the corresponding hourly time series from OMNI 2 for the 2 CRs when Ulysses was in the ecliptic plane. The two time series are in excellent agreement; the big difference between the Ulysses CR average and the yearly average from the OMNI 2 data exists because the CR-averaged speed during the CR in question was at its minimum within the 12 rotations included in the yearly average, as illustrated in the inset in Figure 11.
The agreement between the Ulysses measurements and the OMNI 2 data set during the fast-scan passages is not straightforward to estimate, because Ulysses was passing the ecliptic latitude bins in a time shorter than a half of the CR (see Figure 9) and at heliolongitudes different from Earth’s. In this case averaging over a full CR (shown by red triangles in Figure 10) averages out the heliolongitudinal variation of the solar wind, but likely biases the result due to a possible presence of heliolatitudinal gradients. On the other hand, averaging over a 10-degree heliolatitudinal bin around the solar equator (black triangles in Figure 10) mostly eliminates the latitudinal gradients, but does not average out the heliolongitudinal modulation. However, in reality, the difference between the two averages turned out to be small, similar in magnitude to the differences between the yearly averages of the OMNI 2 and IPS SW speed time series.
Summing up this section, we conclude that the IPS SW speed profiles provide a reliable insight into the SW structure and its evolution with solar activity phase. They agree both with OMNI 2 in-ecliptic and with Ulysses out-of-ecliptic for the time intervals when they can be compared directly.
3 Data Processing and Model Description
Our goal is to retrieve the solar wind (SW) speed and density structure and its evolution in time and heliolatitude, beginning from the maximum of Solar Cycle (SC) 22, through the minimum and maximum of SC 23 (in 1996 and 2001, respectively) until the most recent prolonged minimum. We use all relevant and complementary data sets both in and out of the ecliptic plane, to construct a homogeneous set of SW parameters, which can be further used for, e.g., calculating ionization losses of ENAs, modeling of the heliosphere, and global interpretation of the Lyman-α helioglow. Our procedure takes as a baseline absolute calibration of the OMNI 2 data set both in speed and density in the ecliptic plane and the absolute calibration of Ulysses measurements for density and speed out-of-ecliptic and interplanetary scintillation observations, interpreted by the tomography modeling for speed out-of-ecliptic. Up to now, no global, continuous measurements of SW density as a function of heliographic latitude have been available and this quantity has to be obtained using indirect methods (see Bzowski et al. 2012).
Tests revealed that an appropriate balance between the latitudinal resolution of the coverage and fidelity of the results is obtained at a subdivision of the data into 10-degree heliolatitude bins. Concerning the time resolution, the ideal would be CR averages. Regrettably, such a high resolution seems hard to achieve for two reasons. First, the time coverage in the data from IPS has gaps that typically occur during almost four months at the beginning of each year, which would induce an artificial one-year periodicity in the data. Second, the fast latitude scans by Ulysses lasted about 12 months; hence differentiating between the time and latitude effects in its measurements would be challenging. Thus, the full and reliable latitude structure of the SW can currently be obtained only at a time scale of one year, and this will be the time resolution of the model we present. Furthermore, the typical time of SW proton travel to the termination shock (TS) is about one year for ∼ 1 keV protons, so the adopted time resolution is reasonable for modeling the heliosphere.
3.1 Solar Wind Speed Profiles
For our analysis we take the SW speed available from 1990 to 2011 mapped at the source surface on a grid of 11×360×180 records per year, which corresponds to a series of 11 CRs. The data are organized in heliolatitude from 89.5∘ North to 89.5∘ South in the Carrington maps of the solar surface (see Ulrich and Boyden 2006).
A comparison of the tomography-derived SW speed with the in situ measurements by Ulysses (see Figure 8) showed that the accuracy of the tomographic results depends on the number of IPS observations available for a given rotation. Intervals with a small number of data points clearly tend to underestimate the speed. Consequently, we removed from the data CRs with a total number of points less than 30 000. Rotations with small numbers of available observations typically occur at the beginning and at the end of the year and at the edges of data gaps. The selection of data by the total number of points per rotation constrained the data mainly to the summer and autumn months, when all latitudes are fully sampled.
The selected subset of data was split into years, and each yearly subset into 19 heliolatitude bins, equally spaced from − 90∘ to 90∘. They cover the second half of SC 22 and the full SC 23. We performed a two-step calculation: first CR-averaged values of heliolatitudinal profiles, and next the yearly averages calculated from them. They are shown in Figure 14. Note that the bin-averaged solar wind profiles for specific CRs have very similar shapes to the corresponding yearly profiles with some scatter, which suggests that the general latitudinal structure is stable over a year and changes only on a time scale comparable with the scale of solar activity variations.
Because of the lack of direct data, we had to use the speed profiles to infer density profiles, as discussed below. Therefore, we decided to construct a function that retrieves the SW speed profile for arbitrary time and heliolatitude and smooths the remnant variations in the IPS speed profiles, so that they do not bias the inferred densities. An additional benefit of this approach is the ability to determine latitudinal boundaries of the fast wind outside the solar maximum phase of solar activity.
We smoothed the speed profiles by fitting an approximating piecewise function defined as:
and
with the additional requirement that the sections of the function connect smoothly; i.e., the first derivative of f(ϕ) is continuous at all heliolatitudes.
This model approximates the SW speed as a function of heliolatitude by linear relations in the polar caps and four parabolae at mid latitudes and in the equatorial band, which all transition smoothly between the neighboring sections. A sketch of the function definition is presented in Figure 12, where the splitting into sections is shown on an example profile of the IPS data.
The ordering in Equation (1) is important, because those parts of the profile for which the number of observations is the highest and which are at the north hemisphere are the most reliable. In this way, first of all we fit the function to part 3, i.e., to the north-near ecliptic latitudes, next to part 4, the south-near ecliptic latitudes, next to the part for the mid latitudes, and at the end to the polar regions, but with a higher weight for the north hemisphere because the number of observations per year is greater in the north hemisphere than in the south.
Under these assumptions the function is expressed in the following form:
where the formulae for the coefficients A i , B i and C i are defined in Table 1. The number of free parameters is reduced from 16 in Equation (1) to the following 6: a 3,b 4,c 4,b 1,b 6,c 3. The boundaries ϕ 12, ϕ 23, ϕ 34, ϕ 45, ϕ 56 separate the heliolatitude pieces of the fitted function (see Figure 12) and are chosen separately for each of the yearly profiles so that the fit residuals are minimized. In Table 2 we present the values of the parameters of the smooth function for each yearly profile. The residuals of the fits are typically 4 % and do not exceed 10 %.
Table 3 presents the heliolatitude boundaries adopted for each yearly profile of the IPS SW speed. They are also shown in Figure 13, which illustrates how the heliographic latitude bands change with time and SC phases and how the ranges of SW regimes evolve. During the interval 1998 – 2006 the low-latitude bands of the slow and variable SW expand to mid latitudes. The behavior of the boundaries fitted for the south hemisphere is somewhat different, which is probably due to a lower quality of the IPS speed profiles in the south hemisphere because of the observational conditions discussed above.
This model function was used to smooth the yearly profiles obtained from the IPS tomography data. We use them in further analysis, keeping the 10-degree resolution in latitude. As is seen in Figure 14, the smoothing procedure works very well for all years, with slightly higher residuals at higher latitudes. The model can be used equally well for the solar minimum and maximum conditions, and it can be applied to both IPS and Ulysses data (see Figure 15).
The linear behavior of the fast solar wind as a function of heliolatitude was discovered by McComas, Elliot, and von Steiger (2002) based on in situ measurements by Ulysses. In Figure 16 we show the behavior of SW speed for polar regions for the first and third Ulysses polar orbits. There is a slight drop in speed at the north hemisphere between the first and third scan, while the drop in density is well seen for both hemispheres.
3.2 Solar Wind Density Profiles from Density–Speed Correlation
There have been no direct SW density measurements apart from the Ulysses in situ data, in lack of remote-sensing observations (e.g., density deconvolved from remote-sensing observations of Lyman-α helioglow from SWAN/SOHO), must be estimated the density using indirect approximate methods. The SW density adjusted to 1 AU can be approximately inferred from the speed profiles, but the correlation between speed and density for different heliolatitudes is challenging to obtain. Some insight was provided by Ebert et al. (2009), but in their approach the data from the fast and slow scans were treated collectively, and it was hard to deconvolve the temporal and spatial effects (see Figure 5 for the correlation between the solar distance and heliolatitude).
Here we decided to use an interim solution and retrieve SW density from correlations between the SW speed and density obtained specially for this project from the Ulysses fast latitude scans. During solar minimum the SW speed and density are correlated in heliolatitude, but the correlations seem slightly different between the first and third latitude scans because of the secular changes observed in the SW (McComas et al. 2008). The correlations for the fast scans are illustrated in Figure 17. We assume the following linear relation between the SW proton density n p and speed v p:
where a scan,b scan are fit separately for the speed and density values averaged over 10-degree bins using the ordinary least squares bisector method (see OLS bisector in Isobe et al. 1990), which allows for uncertainty in both ordinate and abscissa, separately for the first and third latitude scans. For the first scan (blue line and points in Figure 17) we obtain:
and for the third scan (green line and dots in Figure 17) the correlation formula parameters are:
Thus, the slopes are almost identical, and the main difference between the two formulae is in the intercept, which reflects the overall secular decrease in SW density between the two solar minima.
The relation between density and speed for the second scan, which occurred during solar maximum, is hard to establish directly because there are few points with high speed values. In this case the spatial and temporal effects seem to be convolved (as discussed earlier). Therefore, we propose to use a very simple relation based on the assumption that the density–speed correlation does not change with solar activity phase and use an arithmetic mean of the relations for the first and third scans as valid for the middle time period:
The relation from Equation (7) is shown in Figure 17 as the red dashed line. It seems to reconstruct the SW density reasonably well, as shown in Figure 18, where the density values actually measured during the second fast latitude scan are compared with those calculated from the adopted correlation formula.
Since we have three different correlation formulae, we have to specify the time intervals of their applicability. We connect them with the changes in SW density in time and adopt the following rules. The formula from the first scan applies to the interval before 1998, because before this time no long-term density changes were observed; the second relation applies to the interval from 1998 until 2002, when the density decrease was the most visible; and the relation from the third scan applies to the interval since 2002, when the density seems to have changed its temporal gradient.
The correlation formulae seem to have a purely statistical character and are only good for reproducing the large-scale relation between bin-averaged speed and density. They do not allow us to reliably reproduce density short-scale variations within the equatorial SW because, as we verified, there is no significant correlation between long-term averages of density and speed in this regime.
We calculate the yearly profiles of SW density as a function of heliolatitude by applying Equation (4) to the smoothed speed profiles reported in the preceding section. The results are shown in Figure 19. Despite the limitations of the correlation formulae, the agreement with Ulysses profiles is good, especially for polar regions during the third fast scan and the northern limb during the first fast scan (see Figure 22). There is a slight difference between the Ulysses measurements and model density results for solar maximum in the south polar region in 2000 and 2001, which might be due to the following reasons: the profile presents the yearly average value and Ulysses the current conditions on the Sun; the data are for solar maximum, when the conditions on the Sun change dynamically in short time scales; the yearly value from IPS is calculated only from about ∼ 8 CRs without winter months and Ulysses sampled the highest south latitudes just in the winter months; and the correlation formula adopted for the solar maximum is retrieved from the solar minimum conditions and thus may not be fully adequate.
3.3 Interpolation in Time
The last step in retrieving the SW structure (both in speed and density) as a function of heliolatitude and time is a linear interpolation to nodes at halves of CRs. To be consistent with the direct measurement in the ecliptic plane, we replace the equatorial bin obtained from the presented analysis with the CR-averaged time series from OMNI 2, linearly interpolated to halves of CRs. The ± 10∘ bins are replaced with values linearly interpolated between the ± 20∘ bins (respectively) and the equatorial bin. Because the data from Ulysses are available only to ∼ 80∘ heliolatitude and the IPS data at ± 90∘ bins are scarce and thus not fully reliable, we calculate the polar values from a parabolic interpolation between the ± 70∘ and ± 80∘ bins. We fit a parabolic curve to the points from bins ± 70∘ and ± 80∘ and their mirror reflection around the appropriate pole, and we calculate the values for the ± 90∘ heliolatitude from the fits.
As a result of this treatment, we have utilized all available information on the equatorial band of SW traversed by the Earth during its yearly orbital motion, and away from the equatorial band, where such detailed information is not available, we have a smooth transition into the region of the low time-resolution model. At the poles, because of the extra smoothing procedure, we avoid a conical sharp peak, forcing with a latitudinal gradient of precisely zero.
The one-year gap for 2010, when data on SW speed from IPS analysis are not sufficient to retrieve the SW speed, we fill in by the average value calculated from the straddling years 2009 and 2011.
4 Results
The primary results of this study are presented in Figure 20, which shows heliolatitude vs. time maps of the solar wind (SW) speed and number density adjusted to 1 AU. The results confirm that the SW speed is bimodal during solar minimum, slow at latitudes close to the solar equator (and thus to the ecliptic plane), and fast at the poles.
The heliolatitude structure evolves with the solar activity cycle and becomes flatter when the activity is increasing. The structure is approximately homogeneous in heliographic latitude only during a short time interval during the peak of solar activity, when the SW at all heliolatitudes is slow (see the panel for 2000 in Figure 14) and highly variable.
Shortly after the activity maximum, the bimodal structure reappears and the fast wind at the poles is observed again, but switchovers from the slow to fast wind close to the poles may still occur during the high activity period: compare the panels for 2001, 2002, and 2003 in the aforementioned figure and see the solar activity level depicted with the blue line in Figure 4.
During the descending and ascending phases of solar activity there is a wide band of slow and variable SW that is on both sides of the equator and extends to mid latitudes. The fast wind is restricted to polar caps and upper mid latitudes.
At solar minimum, the structure is sharp and stable during a few years straddling the turn of solar cycles (SCs), with high speed at the poles and at mid latitudes and a rapid decrease at the equatorial band. Thus, apart from short time intervals at the maximum of solar activity, the SW structure close to the poles is almost flat, with a steady fast speed value typical for wide polar coronal holes, which is in perfect agreement with the measurements from Ulysses (Phillips et al. 1995; McComas, Gosling, and Skoug 2000; McComas et al. 2006).
The bimodal structure of SW speed is also reconstructed in SW density. The variable dense flows are at low latitudes and rarefied near the poles. The SW density changes are anticorrelated with speed. The dense plasma flows are recorded at all heliographic latitudes only during the peak of the solar maximum phase (see 2000 in Figure 19). For other years the SW with a low number density appears at higher latitudes with the minimum values during solar minimum.
Figure 19 also shows that during the minimum of SC 23 the structure of the density was more narrow around the equator than it was during the last minimum of SC 24. It seems that the slow and dense plasma flows typical for solar minimum conditions extended to higher latitudes (about 10∘ farther) than they did during the previous cycle. This means that the secular changes in SW density are very well reflected in our results (the profile width at mid latitudes is wider during the most recent years).
The maps of SW speed and density in Figure 20 also show a slight hemispheric asymmetry, which seems to reverse from one SC to another.
The evolution of SW parameters as a function of time and heliolatitude is needed in modeling the heliosphere and in interpreting measurements such as ENA observations by IBEX (McComas et al. 2009) and heliospheric Lyman-α glow analysis (Quémerais et al. 2006; Lallement et al. 2010a). If we know the density and speed, we can easily calculate the SW flux:
the charge-exchange rate between SW protons and stationary H atoms:
where σ CX is the cross section for the charge-exchange rate (Lindsay and Stebbings 2005), and the dynamic pressure:
where j numbers the 10-degree heliolatitude bins and i is the number of Carrington rotation (CRs) in our time grid.
Figure 21 shows contour maps of the SW flux, charge-exchange rate, and dynamic pressure for the years since 1990 to the end of 2011 and for heliolatitude from − 90∘ to 90∘. The gap in 2010 is filled by the average value calculated from 2009 and 2011. The flux features a clear secular drop after the last solar maximum. The bimodal structure during the current solar minimum seems to be even better defined than during the previous one. The structure at solar maximum is quite flat and seen longer compared to the speed.
The charge-exchange rate basically follows the behavior of the flux, with a clear latitudinal contrast during low activity periods, an almost flat structure at solar maximum, and a secular drop after the most recent solar maximum.
The dynamic pressure behaves differently than the flux. While variations in time are clearly visible, the latitudinal structure is much less pronounced and does not vary much during the SC. Basically, the dynamic pressure is almost spherically symmetric (with possible exceptions in the polar caps, which, however, cease closer to the poles than in the case of the flux), and the most striking feature is the secular drop in the strength, which begins earlier than in the flux, namely about 1998. This behavior has pronounced consequences for the shape of the termination shock, which should not feature a very strong latitudinal variation in size, but which should now be significantly closer to the Sun than during the previous solar minimum.
5 Discussion
To check the credibility of our results, we compare them with the Ulysses data from all scans. The Ulysses data are prepared by splitting the hourly data into full CRs and calculating average values. Next we linearly interpolate our model values to the times and heliolatitudes corresponding to the CR-averaged Ulysses data.
A comparison is presented in Figure 22. The agreement is good in the ecliptic parts of the Ulysses orbit and satisfactory for higher latitudes. The model retrieves the fast SW speed, but some discrepancies exist for the slow and variable solar plasma flows. We have a better agreement in SW speed than in density, which is understandable, since the density values were derived from the already approximate speed values using approximate statistically derived SW density–speed relations.
The worst agreement between Ulysses density measurements and our model is during the third slow scan (during the descending phase of solar activity), when Ulysses in situ measurements for this SC phase give highly variable values, nearly 50 % greater than our model predictions. The source of the disagreement might be connected with the density–speed correlation formula we adopted for this time interval: for solar maximum we use an average formula from the two fast scans during solar minimum, assuming that the correlation does not change with the SC.
However, the overall agreement is much better. The residuals of speed are typically 10 %, not exceeding 30 %, and typical residuals of density are 20 – 30 %, not exceeding 60 %. The sign of the residuals varies, which suggests that there is no systematic global bias in our method. Given all the uncertainties in the absolute calibration of both in situ measurements and IPS observations and the relative simplicity of our approach, we believe that the level of agreement between the model and the measurements is quite good, and would be hard to improve without an additional data source.
Such a source of additional information might result from an inversion of photometric maps of the Lyman-α helioglow obtained from SWAN/SOHO observations (Lallement et al. 2010b), aimed at calculating the total ionization rate of neutral interstellar hydrogen in the inner heliosphere as a function of heliolatitude and CR. With this information, one might be able to follow the idea presented by Bzowski et al. (2012) and independently calculate the profiles of SW density.
In this analysis we assumed that the SW parameters obtained from OMNI 2, Ulysses, and IPS are directly comparable, i.e., that there is no systematic change in SW speed with solar distance between the region from the SW acceleration region (a dozen solar radii) to 1 AU, from which the IPS SW speeds are retrieved, and Ulysses, which measured between ∼ 1.4 and ∼ 5.5 AU. Also, we assume there is no distance-related change in the density other than the simple 1/r 2 scaling.
The assumption of purely radial expansion of the SW implies that the latitude structure we inferred in this paper does not change until the termination shock. This may not be exactly true, as pointed out by Fahr and Scherer (2004), who argue that the pickup ion (PUI) pressure induces nonradial flows at large heliocentric distances. Such flows would cause changes both in the radial component of the SW speed and in the local density. In our opinion, a more thorough study of this effect requires using a multifluid, 3D, and time-dependent MHD modeling with turbulence and boundary/initial conditions taken from observations. To our knowledge, this model is still in development (Usmanov et al. 2011), and our results seem to be well suited as its boundary conditions.
The assumption of a 1/r 2 drop in density and constancy of speed is increasingly invalid with increasing solar distance, because of the interaction with neutral interstellar gas, which results in the creation of PUIs and slowdown and heating of the distant SW. These phenomena were extensively discussed by Fahr and Ruciński (1999, 2001, 2002), Fahr (2007), Lee et al. (2009), and Richardson et al. (1995, 2008a, 2008b).
However, for the global modeling of the heliosphere and calculation of survival probabilities it is the total flux of the SW, a sum of the core SW and PUIs, that counts most. In this respect, the total SW flux exactly follows the 1/r 2 scaling due to the continuity conditions, as discussed by Bzowski et al. (2012). This happens because most of the PUIs are created due to charge-exchange and thus are not new members of the SW population.
6 Summary and Outlook
We have combined in situ and IPS remote-sensing observations to retrieve the heliolatitudinal structure at 1 AU of solar wind speed and density and its evolution in time, and produced a time series of heliolatitudinal profiles of solar wind speed and density for each year between 1990 and 2009, averaged over 10-degree heliolatitude bins.
We carefully checked the agreement between the solar wind speed measurements available in the OMNI 2 data base and Ulysses fast latitude scans and IPS measurements of solar wind speed in the ecliptic plane and found it to be excellent. We verified the agreement between the yearly averaged heliolatitude profiles of solar wind speed available from computer assisted tomography, and processed the IPS observations and the speed profiles obtained from the three fast latitude scans from Ulysses. Thus, we adopted the IPS-derived yearly speed profiles with some additional smoothing as representative for solar wind starting from the maximum of solar activity in 1990 until the end of available data in 2011 (see Figure 15).
Based on the measurements from Ulysses obtained from the first and third fast latitude scans, performed during the previous and most recent solar minima, we established approximate linear correlations between solar wind density and speed that can be used only to retrieve the heliolatitude structure of the solar wind density. We found that the slope was practically unchanged between the two cycles, but the intercept changed because of the global reduction in solar wind density observed since the solar minimum in 2001. Using these correlations, we calculated the yearly solar wind density profiles based on the smoothed velocity profiles (see Figure 19).
To facilitate the use of our time and the heliolatitude model of solar wind structure in the interpretation of heliospheric measurements, we calculated bilinearly interpolated profiles of solar wind speed and density on a Carrington rotation period grid and replaced the equatorial values obtained from the aforementioned procedure with Carrington rotation averages of the solar wind speed and density available from the OMNI 2 time series (see Figure 20), and ± 10∘ and ± 90∘ bins by appropriate interpolation values.
Further, we calculated some quantities frequently used in heliospheric studies, including solar wind flux, charge-exchange rate with neutral H, and solar wind dynamic pressure (see Figure 21).
The results presented in this paper under the assumption about the radial solar wind flow can be applied in global heliospheric modeling, where one needs to know the long-term variations in solar wind ram pressure and production rate of pickup ions, but where short-scale variations in the parameters are less important. The results can also be applied in the interpretation of in-ecliptic heliospheric measurements such as observations of H ENA flux by IBEX or observations of the Lyman-α helioglow, where the most important effects are those of the solar wind interaction with hydrogen atoms within ∼ 10 AU from the Sun. A homogeneous treatment of long time series of solar wind observations enables a direct application of our results to the interpretation of heliospheric experiments from 1990 until the present.
The model can still be improved by using additional sources of data and a more advanced modeling of solar wind evolution in time and solar distance. Improving the model will most likely have to be an iterative process. For example, the current model could be used as input to a procedure used to fit a ionization rate model to the global helioglow observations by SWAN/SOHO, and from the result of this fitting an approximation of solar wind density profiles and their evolution in time could be retrieved and used to improve our solar wind evolution model. Studies of the time and heliographic latitude behavior of the solar wind are thus still a work in progress.
Notes
The same latitudes were visited only a few times during the ∼20-year mission.
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Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the use of solar wind speed data from IPS observations carried out by STEL Japan, and NASA/GSFC’s Space Physics Data Facility’s ftp service for Ulysses/SWOOPS ( ftp://nssdcftp.gsfc.nasa.gov/spacecraft_data/ulysses/plasma/swoops/ion/ ) and OMNI 2 data collection ( ftp://nssdcftp.gsfc.nasa.gov/spacecraft_data/omni/ ). The F 10.7 solar radio flux was provided by the NOAA and Pentincton Solar Radio Monitoring Program operated jointly by the National Research Council and the Canadian Space Agency ( ftp://ftp.ngdc.noaa.gov/STP/SOLAR_DATA/SOLAR_RADIO/FLUX/Penticton_Adjusted/ and ftp://ftp.geolab.nrcan.gc.ca/data/solar_flux/daily_flux_values/ ). J.S. and M.B. were supported by the Polish Ministry for Science and Higher Education, grants NS-1260-11-09 and N-N203-513-038. Contributions from D.M. were supported by NASA’s IBEX Explorer mission.
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Observations and Modelling of the Inner Heliosphere
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Sokół, J.M., Bzowski, M., Tokumaru, M. et al. Heliolatitude and Time Variations of Solar Wind Structure from in situ Measurements and Interplanetary Scintillation Observations. Sol Phys 285, 167–200 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11207-012-9993-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11207-012-9993-9