Publication | Closed Access
Ulysses Solar Wind Plasma Observations at High Southerly Latitudes
222
Citations
25
References
1995
Year
GeophysicsSolar VariabilityProton TemperatureEngineeringSolar ConvectionPlasma PhysicsSpace PhysicSolar WindHigh Southerly LatitudesSolar-terrestrial InteractionSpace Plasma PhysicRecurrent High-speed StreamsSpace WeatherAstrophysics
Solar wind plasma observations made by the Ulysses spacecraft through -80.2 degrees solar latitude and continuing equatorward to -40.1 degrees are summarized. Recurrent high-speed streams and corotating interaction regions dominated at middle latitudes. The speed of the solar wind was typically 700 to 800 kilometers per second poleward of -35 degrees . Corotating reverse shocks persisted farther south than did forward shocks because of the tilt of the heliomagnetic streamer belt. Sporadic coronal mass ejections were seen as far south as -60.5 degrees . Proton temperature was higher and the electron strahl was broader at higher latitudes. The high-latitude wind contained compressional, pressure-balanced, and Alfvénic structures.
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