Solar Wind Conditions and Composition During the Genesis Mission as Measured by in situ Spacecraft
Autor: | Daniel B. Reisenfeld, Marcia Neugebauer, Thomas H. Zurbuchen, John T. Steinberg, R. C. Wiens, Bruce Barraclough, Jim M. Raines |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Physics
Coronal hole Astronomy and Astrophysics Context (language use) Solar maximum Atmospheric sciences Solar irradiance Solar cycle Solar wind Space and Planetary Science Physics::Space Physics Coronal mass ejection Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics Sample collection Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics |
Zdroj: | Space Science Reviews. 175:125-164 |
ISSN: | 1572-9672 0038-6308 |
Popis: | We describe the Genesis mission solar-wind sample collection period and the solar wind conditions at the L1 point during this 2.3-year period. In order to relate the solar wind samples to solar composition, the conditions under which the samples were collected must be understood in the context of the long-term solar wind. We find that the state of the solar wind was typical of conditions over the past four solar cycles. However, Genesis spent a relatively large fraction of the time in coronal-hole flow as compared to what might have been expected for the declining phase of the solar cycle. Data from the Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer (SWICS) on the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) are used to determine the effectiveness of the Genesis solar-wind regime selection algorithm. The data collected by SWICS confirm that the Genesis algorithm successfully separated and collected solar wind regimes having distinct solar origins, particularly in the case of the coronal hole sample. The SWICS data also demonstrate that the different regimes are elementally fractionated. When compared with Ulysses composition data from the previous solar cycle, we find a similar degree of fractionation between regimes as well as fractionation relative to the average photospheric composition. The Genesis solar wind samples are under long-term curation at NASA Johnson Space Center so that as sample analysis techniques evolve, pristine solar wind samples will be available to the scientific community in the decades to come. This article and a companion paper (Wiens et al. 2013, this issue) provide post-flight information necessary for the analysis of the Genesis array and foil solar wind samples and the Genesis solar wind ion concentrator samples, and thus serve to complement the Space Science Review volume, The Genesis Mission (v. 105, 2003). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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