Solar
Wind Speed from South Pole to North Pole:
The upper panel contains an X-ray image of the Sun obtained
by the Soft X-ray Telescope on the Japanese Yohkoh spacecraft;
the lower panel shows the solar wind speed and density observed
by the Ulysses spacecraft from the South Pole to the North
Pole. The latitudinal region indicated by the yellow bar
in the lower panel is the region previously explored by
in-ecliptic spacecraft. Hot, trapped coronal plasma (ionized
gas) radiates in the X-ray and appears in the Yohkoh image
as the bright regions. The high speed solar wind is known
to originate in coronal holes (the dark areas of the image)
from which coronal plasma can readily escape. Two distinct
plasma regimes can be seen in the solar wind data. (1) At
high latitudes the velocity (red line in lower panel) is
high and the density (blue line in lower panel) is low.
(2) Near the equator, the velocity is low and the density
is high. A significant qualitative feature at high latitude
is the steady solar wind speed (approximately 750 km/sec).
Prior to these observations, a continuous increase of velocity
toward the pole had been expected. (SWOOPS experiment, J.
Phillips, Los Alamos National Laboratory).
Solar
Magnetic Field Strength:
Many models of the solar magnetic field used prior to Ulysses
assumed that the solar magnetic field was similar to that
of a dipole; field lines near the solar equator were thought
to form closed loops whereas field lines from the poles
were dragged far into interplanetary space by the solar
wind. For a dipole, the field strength over the poles is
twice that at the equator. Ulysses found that the amount
of outward magnetic flux in the solar wind did not vary
greatly with latitude, indicating the importance of pressure
forces near the sun for evenly distributing magnetic flux.
(MAG experiment, A. Balogh, Imperial College; E. Smith,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory).
Compositional
Differences of Fast and Slow Streams:
Three parameters are shown over an interval of one and a
half solar rotations, using a superposed epoch method of
nine solar rotations of 26 days duration. The solar wind
speed, V, (dashed line, derived from the measurement of
alpha particles (doubly ionized He)), shows alternating
high speed streams (from high latitude) and low speed solar
wind (from low latitude). The abundances of two heavy ions
in the solar wind, magnesium and oxygen, are shown as their
ratio, Mg/O, in red. The anticorrelation with V shows that
Mg/O is larger in low speed streams than in high speed streams.
The third parameter (dark blue) is the so-called "freezing-in"
temperature. It is derived from the relative abundances
of O7+ and O6+, i.e., seven and six times ionized oxygen
atoms. The ratio is a measure of the temperature in the
solar atmosphere at the location where the ions were created:
T(O7/O6). In the low speed solar wind, this temperature
is high, over 1.6 million degrees, indicative of a hot coronal
source. The compositional and temperature boundaries between
the two types of plasma are very sharp, much better defined
than by speed. A further point of interest is the value
of Mg/O which lies between 6% in the fast streams and 13%
in the slow wind (on the red scale; more recent results
yield somewhat higher values of 8% and 17%, respectively).
Such values are higher than the abundance ratios typically
observed in the photosphere. The surprising conclusion is
that chromospheric ionization and transport processes are
influencing coronal composition, and that the strength of
these processes is correlated to the temperature in the
corona. Hence there exists a close, causal relationship
between chromospheric and coronal conditions.(SWICS experiment,
J. Geiss, University of Ben; G. Gloeckler, University of
Maryland; figure from J. Geiss, G. Gloeckler and R. von
Steiger, Origin of the Solar Wind From Composition Data,
Space Science Rev. 72, 49-60, 1995).
Diffusion
of Cosmic Rays in the Heliosphere:
Cosmic rays are very energetic atomic nucleiaccelerated
in interstellar space; they diffuse inward in the heliosphere
through the solar wind's electric and magnetic fields and
are observed on the Earth and by spacecraft in interplanetary
space. The magnetic fields of the solar wind are known to
be wound up in a spiral pattern due to the rotation of the
Sun; the winding is analogous to the spiral pattern made
by a rotating lawn sprinkler. Since the solar rotation velocity
is lower at high latitudes, the azimuthal magnetic fields
at high latitudes are weaker, and the length along the magnetic
field to the boundary of the heliosphere where cosmic rays
enter the solar system is less. Since cosmic rays tend to
follow magnetic field lines, many thought that cosmic rays
would have easier access at high latitudes and that cosmic
ray fluxes would be higher in this region. Ulysses established
that cosmic ray fluxes are not greatly enhanced in the polar
regions because the cosmic rays traveling through the polar
regions are scattered by large-amplitude magnetic waves
(not shown in the figure) that Ulysses discovered in this
region.