Published March 2009 | Version public
Book Section - Chapter

The Solar Wind in the Outer Heliosphere

Abstract

The solar wind evolves as it moves outward due to interactions with both itself and with the circum-heliospheric interstellar medium. The speed is, on average, constant out to 30 AU, then starts a slow decrease due to the pickup of interstellar neutrals. These neutrals reduce the solar wind speed by about 20% before the termination shock (TS). The pickup ions heat the thermal plasma so that the solar wind temperature increases outside 20–30 AU. Solar cycle effects are important; the solar wind pressure changes by a factor of 2 over a solar cycle and the structure of the solar wind is modified by interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) near solar maximum. The first direct evidences of the TS were the observations of streaming energetic particles by both Voyagers 1 and 2 beginning about 2 years before their respective TS crossings. The second evidence was a slowdown in solar wind speed commencing 80 days before Voyager 2 crossed the TS. The TS was a weak, quasi-perpendicular shock which transferred the solar wind flow energy mainly to the pickup ions. The heliosheath has large fluctuations in the plasma and magnetic field on time scales of minutes to days.

Additional Information

© Springer Science+Business Media, BV 2008. This work was supported by NASA; at MIT by NASA contract 959203 from JPL to MIT and NASA grant NAG5-8947. Originally published in the journal Space Science Reviews, Volume 143, Nos 1–4, 7–20.

Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
98910
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20190927-135404002

Funding

NASA/JPL
959203
NASA
NAG5-8947

Dates

Created
2019-09-30
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-16
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Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Space Radiation Laboratory
Series Name
Space Science Series of ISSI
Series Volume or Issue Number
31