Variations in the solar wind speed along the earth's orbit
β Scribed by J. T. Gosling
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1971
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 480 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0038-0938
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Comparison of solar wind speed data obtained from the Pioneer 6 and 7 and Vela 3, 4, and 5 satellites from January 1969 through July 1970 has been undertaken. The distribution of measured speeds is similar for all satellites, despite wide separations along the Earth's orbit. For satellite separations (along the Earth's orbit) of 0.5 AU or less, the speeds measured by different satellites are closely correlated, i.e., it is usually possible to predict (to within 4-100 km sec -1) the arrival of a particular solar wind speed at one satellite on the basis of earlier measurements at another. For separations larger than ~ 1.0 AU it is usually not possible to make accurate predictions in this manner. This appears to be evidence that: (1) the boundary conditions on the coronal expansion at the base of the corona are a sensitive function of latitude and/or (2) the boundary conditions at any one point on the Sun evolve sufficiently in ~ 4 days to alter significantly the speed of the wind at 1 AU.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
By analyzing observational data, it has been possible to determine quantitative relationships that represent the role of the interaction of fast and slow solar wind (SW) streams in the formation of characteristic SW properties at the Earth's orbit. It is shown that maximum values of magnetic field
## Abstract Observations from several sites are utilized to investigate spatial and temporal variations in the local wind regime. The average condition consists of a tongue of easterly upβvalley winds extending the length of the valley. About 23 per cent of the time this tongue is pushed downβvalle