Solar coronal streamers |
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Authors: | J. David Bohlin |
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Affiliation: | (1) Hale Observatories, Carnegie Institution of Washington, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif., U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | A unique combination of photographic and K-coronameter data were used to study the structure and evolution of two known coronal streamers. In addition, two other K-coronameter enhancements were studied as representing ideal second examples of the known streamers. As a general rule the observations indicate that these features were direct coronal manifestations of photospheric bipolar magnetic regions (BMR) and were of two basic types:active region, by which is meant a coronal streamer which develops radially over a low-latitude active region; andhelmet which denotes a streamer whose structure and development appear to be a consequence of a long-lived complex of activity, composed of both trailing magnetic fields and a parent center of disk activity.The similarity of growth rates during the first solar rotation of life led to derivation of a total streamer density of 4–5 × 108 cm–3 atr = 1.125R . This density may represent a characteristic maximum density at the base of streamers. The intensity gradient of the inner (r 1.5R ) corona was used to establish a qualitative evolutionary model of streamers which synthesizes the observations. Briefly, streamers initially develop over active regions; the streamer growth rate may be as rapid as the disk activity, or at worst lags flare activity by  solar rotation. The streamer can be the cause of interplanetary and geomagnetic effects at 1 AU within a solar rotation after birth. Thereafter the streamer follows an evolution dictated by the underlying solar magnetic fields. In any case the lowest level of the coronal enhancement has a lifetime not exceeding that of the solar disk activity. |
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