oai:arXiv.org:2408.16149
sciences: astrophysics
2024
9/4/2024
Potential Field Source Surface (PFSS) models are widely used to simulate coronal magnetic fields.
PFSS models use the observed photospheric magnetic field as the inner boundary condition and assume a perfectly radial field beyond a ``Source Surface" ($R_{ss}$).
At present, total solar eclipse (TSE) white light images are the only data that delineate the coronal magnetic field from the photosphere out to several solar radii ($R_\odot$).
We utilize a complete solar cycle span of these images between 2008 and 2020 as a benchmark to assess the reliability of PFSS models.
For a quantitative assessment, we apply a rolling Hough transform (RHT) to the eclipse data and corresponding PFFS models to measure the difference, $\Delta\theta$, between the data and model magnetic field lines throughout the corona.
We find that the average $\Delta\theta$, $\langle\Delta\theta\rangle$, can be minimized for a given choice of $R_{ss}$ depending on the phase within a solar cycle.
In particular, $R_{ss}\approx1.3 \ R_\odot$ is found to be optimal for solar maximum, while $R_{ss}\approx3 \ R_\odot$ yields a better match at solar minimum.
However, large ($\langle\Delta\theta\rangle>10^\circ$) discrepancies between TSE data and PFSS-generated coronal field lines remain regardless of the choice of source surface.
Yet, implementation of solar cycle dependent $R_{ss}$ optimal values do yield more reliable PFSS-generated coronal field lines for use in models and for tracing in-situ measurements back to their sources at the Sun.
;Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Benavitz, Luke Fushimi,Boe, Benjamin,Habbal, Shadia Rifai, 2024, Total Solar Eclipse White Light Images as a Benchmark for PFSS Coronal Magnetic Field Models: An In-Depth Analysis over a Solar Cycle