Solar wind ion trends and signatures: STEREO PLASTIC observations approaching solar minimum

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Abstract

STEREO has now completed the first two years of its mission, moving from close proximity to Earth in 2006/2007 to more than 50 degrees longitudinal separation from Earth in 2009. During this time, several large-scale structures have been observed in situ. Given the prevailing solar minimum conditions, these structures have been predominantly coronal hole-associated solar wind, slow solar wind, their interfaces, and the occasional transient event. In this paper, we extend earlier solar wind composition studies into the current solar minimum using high-resolution (1-h) sampling times for the charge state analysis. We examine 2-year trends for iron charge states and solar wind proton speeds, and present a case study of Carrington Rotation 2064 (December 2007) which includes minor ion (He, Fe, O) kinetic and Fe composition parameters in comparison with proton and magnetic field signatures at large-scale structures observed during this interval.

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Galvin, A. B., Popecki, M. A., Simunac, K. D. C., Kistler, L. M., Ellis, L., Barry, J., … Wurz, P. (2009). Solar wind ion trends and signatures: STEREO PLASTIC observations approaching solar minimum. Annales Geophysicae, 27(10), 3909–3922. https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-27-3909-2009

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