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Download The Transport of Open Magnetic Flux on the Solar Surface and its
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The Transport of Open Magnetic Flux on the Solar Surface and its Influence on the Solar Dynamo L. A. Fisk University of Michigan Points to be Made I want to start by reviewing the behavior of the open magnetic flux of the Sun, the component of the solar magnetic field that opens into the heliosphere, as we understood it during the last solar minimum. I want to discuss how the current unusual solar minimum has altered, and in some ways reenforced our understanding of the behavior of open flux. I then want to consider how the behavior of the open flux may influence the solar dynamo. This figure illustrates how we expected the open magnetic flux to behave at solar minimum. •You have a polar coronal hole, with an axis of symmetry offset from the solar rotation axis. •The open flux shown in green over-expands from the coronal hole. •The open flux differentially rotates. •The open flux is then forced to move as shown by the red arrows. There was observational support for the motions of the open flux shown in red. •The motions will alter the configuration of the heliospheric magnetic field, such that it is easier for lowenergy particles to be transported in heliographic latitude. •Such transport was in fact observed by Ulysses, and in fact considered to be a major Ulysses discovery. Note what happens to the open flux when it gets to low latitudes. •There is a single current sheet in the heliosphere, located at the center of the yellow band. •The open flux has two choices. Disconnect at the current sheet, or reconnect with a series of low-latitude coronal loops, and execute a diffusive transport around the Sun, as shown, so there is a continuous global transport of open magnetic flux. Disconnection must occur at the current sheet, where two open field lines of opposite can interact. It must also occur inside the Alfven point, for a net reduction of open flux. •At the time of this work, disconnection was seen to be unlikely, because of the absence of dropouts in electron heat flux. The electron heat flux data is now ambiguous. However, it is unlikely that disconnection is important since it would have to occur all on one side of the Sun, and that should have been noticed. Assuming that disconnection is not important, and the low latitude transport is by diffusion due to reconnection with loops, there are some nice consequences. •You can account for the differences in composition between the fast and the slow solar wind. •You can explain why the open magnetic flux returns to same value at each solar minimum (or was thought to do so). CMEs can temporarily add magnetic flux to the heliosphere, but interchange reconnection, in which the open flux reconnects with the CME loop, returns the magnetic flux to the background level, which is being transported about as shown in the figure. Initially, the behavior of the heliospheric magnetic field during the current solar minimum caused us to doubt our understandings. 26% 24% 28% 38% We expected that the magnetic field strength would return to same value as in previous minima, due to the lack of disconnection. However, the magnetic field strength dropped by 25%. Liang Zhao, my graduate student, has a very interesting poster here at SHINE, which I think resolves our concerns. •Liang uses solar wind composition to identify solar wind that originates from the streamer belt, in a band that surrounds the current sheet. It has an identifiable composition in solar wind charge states. •Liang finds that the band of streamer belt wind is a factor of two or more narrower in the current minimum, compared to the previous one. •Conversely, the solid angle occupied by non-streamer belt wind, which is mainly coronal hole associated wind, is larger in the current minimum compared to the previous one. The magnetic field in the non-streamer belt wind is lower in the current minimum, and the solid angle is larger. Liang then demonstrates that the total magnetic flux in nonstreamer belt solar wind is in fact the same in the current and in the previous solar minimum. Our picture then needs to change slightly. The magnetic structure of the streamer belt appears to be impenetrable to the magnetic field originating outside the streamer belt, which is not surprising since the loops in the streamer belt have the same orientation as the open flux and reconnection is not possible. We still have to have our continuous flow pattern of open flux, but now the reconnection with loops, and subsequent diffusion, has to occur outside the streamer belt. Note that in this model, disconnection of open magnetic flux originating from outside of the streamer belt is not possible. There is an impenetrable barrier that separates this open flux from open flux of opposite polarity. We have every reason to assume, then, that the total amount of open magnetic flux from outside the streamer belt is the same in each solar minimum. What does all have to do with the solar dynamo? •In the solar dynamo, new magnetic flux of opposite polarity is transported to the solar poles (by meridional flow, diffusion) to cancel the existing polar flux. •The new emerging flux is closed magnetic flux, but when the flux arrives at the poles, it is observed to be open magnetic flux. •Presumably, the closed flux and the open flux undergo interchange reconnection, converting the closed flux into open flux. However, as we have demonstrated there is a fixed amount of open magnetic flux present, and this constraint needs to be accounted for. A fixed amount of open flux in the current solar minimum In the current solar minimum, where the polar magnetic flux is reduced, and there appear to be more low-latitude coronal holes, the limitation on the amount of open flux present should not matter. One can imagine that what has varied is the transport to the poles, and less has been gathered into the polar regions. However, in a cycle where the polar fields are strong, and most of the available open magnetic flux has been gathered into the poles, this limitation may matter. •For example, Schrijver et al. (ApJ, 2002) did a study where they modeled the behavior of the polar field over centuries, using only estimates of the magnetic flux that is emitted in sunspots. The agreement with current observations was not good, and I suspect it would have been better if they had simply placed an upper limit on the amount of open flux that is possible to gather at the poles.