Disappearance of the heliospheric sector structure at Ulysses
Abstract
In May, 1993, the heliospheric current sheet (HCS) ceased to be seen by the Ulysses spacecraft at a heliocentric latitude of ∼30° S and distance of 4.7 AU. The disappearance of the HCS coincided with the solar wind speed remaining >560 km/s and with the disappearance of one of four interaction regions previously seen on each solar rotation. The heliographic latitude of the disappearance of the HCS at Ulysses was 11° equatorward of the latitude of the magnetic neutral sheet computed at the source surface at 2.5 solar radii, and it occurred a half year earlier than predicted on the basis of the persistence of the time profile of the neutral sheet tilt from one solar cycle to the next.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- November 1993
- DOI:
- 10.1029/93GL02632
- Bibcode:
- 1993GeoRL..20.2327S
- Keywords:
-
- Current Sheets;
- Heliosphere;
- Solar Magnetic Field;
- Solar Wind Velocity;
- Magnetic Poles;
- Mathematical Models;
- Neutral Sheets;
- Solar Cycles;
- Ulysses Mission;
- Solar Physics;
- Interplanetary Physics: Interplanetary magnetic fields;
- Interplanetary Physics: Solar wind plasma;
- Interplanetary Physics: Sources of the solar wind