Lifecycle of a large-scale polar coronal pseudostreamer/cavity system
Abstract
Coronal cavities, tunnel-like areas of rarefied density, provide important information about the magnetic structures that support prominences. The magnetic energy is stored through the twisted or shared magnetic field, ultimately released through Coronal Mass Ejections (CME). To be able to forecast these energetic releases of material and prevent potential terrestrial consequences, the understanding of the cavity 3D morphology, magnetic and thermal properties are essential. The prominences embedded in the cavity only trace a small part of the magnetic field, whereas the much larger cavity provides more information about the magnetic field morphology. As a result, a clear understanding of the coronal volume of the cavity significantly advances our understanding of both the pre-eruption equilibrium and the triggers of such eruptions. Determining both morphological and thermodynamical coronal structures is difficult due to the optically thin nature of the plasma. Observations are subject to integration along the line-of-sight (LOS). This effect can strongly complicate both the derivation and the interpretation of important physical quantities. One way to deduce the 3D structure is with Solar Rotational Tomography (SRT). The 3D plasma emissivity is estimated from EUV/white light images taken from different viewpoints. Physical properties can be then derived using Differential Emission Measure analysis from multi-wavelength 3D reconstructions. We applied this technique to an exceptional large-scale coronal pseudostreamer/cavity system in the southern polar region of the solar corona that was visible for approximately a year starting in February 2014. It is unusual to see such a large closed-field structure embedded within the open polar coronal hole. We investigate this structure to document its formation, evolution and eventually its shrinking process using data from both the PROBA2/SWAP and SDO/AIA EUV imagers. We found that the cavity temperature is extremely stable with time and is essentially at a similar or slightly hotter temperature than the surrounding pseudostreamer. Two regimes in cavity thermal properties were observed: during the first 5 months of observation, we found lower density depletion and highly multi-thermal plasma, while after the pseudostreamer became stable and slowly shrank, the depletion was more pronounced and the plasma was less multithermal. As the thermodynamic properties are strongly correlated with the magnetic structure, these results provide constraints on both the trigger of CMEs and the processes that maintain cavities stability for such a long lifetime.
- Publication:
-
41st COSPAR Scientific Assembly
- Pub Date:
- July 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016cosp...41E.749G