Publication detail
The Solar Minimum Eclipse of 2019 July 2. II. The First Absolute Brightness Measurements and MHD Model Predictions of Fe x, xi, and xiv out to 3.4 R (circle dot)
BOE, B. HABBAL, S. COOPER, D. DRUCKMÜLLER, M.
English title
The Solar Minimum Eclipse of 2019 July 2. II. The First Absolute Brightness Measurements and MHD Model Predictions of Fe x, xi, and xiv out to 3.4 R (circle dot)
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
en
Original abstract
We present the spatially resolved absolute brightness of the Fe x, Fe xi, and Fe xiv visible coronal emission lines from 1.08 to 3.4 R (circle dot), observed during the 2019 July 2 total solar eclipse (TSE). The morphology of the corona was typical of solar minimum, with a dipole field dominance showcased by large polar coronal holes and a broad equatorial streamer belt. The Fe xi line is found to be the brightest, followed by Fe x and Fe xiv (in disk B (circle dot) units). All lines had brightness variations between streamers and coronal holes, where Fe xiv exhibited the largest variation. However, Fe x remained surprisingly uniform with latitude. The Fe line brightnesses are used to infer the relative ionic abundances and line-of-sight-averaged electron temperature (T ( e )) throughout the corona, yielding values from 1.25 to 1.4 MK in coronal holes and up to 1.65 MK in the core of streamers. The line brightnesses and inferred T ( e ) values are then quantitatively compared to the Predictive Science Inc. magnetohydrodynamic model prediction for this TSE. The MHD model predicted the Fe lines rather well in general, while the forward-modeled line ratios slightly underestimated the observationally inferred T ( e ) within 5%-10% averaged over the entire corona. Larger discrepancies in the polar coronal holes may point to insufficient heating and/or other limitations in the approach. These comparisons highlight the importance of TSE observations for constraining models of the corona and solar wind formation.
English abstract
We present the spatially resolved absolute brightness of the Fe x, Fe xi, and Fe xiv visible coronal emission lines from 1.08 to 3.4 R (circle dot), observed during the 2019 July 2 total solar eclipse (TSE). The morphology of the corona was typical of solar minimum, with a dipole field dominance showcased by large polar coronal holes and a broad equatorial streamer belt. The Fe xi line is found to be the brightest, followed by Fe x and Fe xiv (in disk B (circle dot) units). All lines had brightness variations between streamers and coronal holes, where Fe xiv exhibited the largest variation. However, Fe x remained surprisingly uniform with latitude. The Fe line brightnesses are used to infer the relative ionic abundances and line-of-sight-averaged electron temperature (T ( e )) throughout the corona, yielding values from 1.25 to 1.4 MK in coronal holes and up to 1.65 MK in the core of streamers. The line brightnesses and inferred T ( e ) values are then quantitatively compared to the Predictive Science Inc. magnetohydrodynamic model prediction for this TSE. The MHD model predicted the Fe lines rather well in general, while the forward-modeled line ratios slightly underestimated the observationally inferred T ( e ) within 5%-10% averaged over the entire corona. Larger discrepancies in the polar coronal holes may point to insufficient heating and/or other limitations in the approach. These comparisons highlight the importance of TSE observations for constraining models of the corona and solar wind formation.
Keywords in English
Corona; Absolute brightness
Released
24.08.2022
Publisher
IOP Publishing Ltd
Location
BRISTOL
ISSN
0004-637X
Volume
935
Number
2
Pages count
13
BIBTEX
@article{BUT180029,
author="Benjamin {Boe} and Shadia Rifai {Habbal} and Downs {Cooper} and Miloslav {Druckmüller},
title="The Solar Minimum Eclipse of 2019 July 2. II. The First Absolute Brightness Measurements and MHD Model Predictions of Fe x, xi, and xiv out to 3.4 R (circle dot)",
year="2022",
volume="935",
number="2",
month="August",
publisher="IOP Publishing Ltd",
address="BRISTOL",
issn="0004-637X"
}