Coronal Models and Detection of Open Magnetic Field
A plethora of coronal models, from empirical to more complex magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) ones, are being used for reconstructing the coronal magnetic field topology and estimating the open magnetic flux. However, no individual solution fully agrees with coronal hole observations and in situ measuremen...
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Zusammenfassung: | A plethora of coronal models, from empirical to more complex
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) ones, are being used for reconstructing the coronal
magnetic field topology and estimating the open magnetic flux. However, no
individual solution fully agrees with coronal hole observations and in situ
measurements of open flux at 1~AU, as there is a strong deficit between model
and observations contributing to the known problem of the missing open flux. In
this paper we investigate the possible origin of the discrepancy between
modeled and observed magnetic field topology by assessing the effect on the
simulation output by the choice of the input boundary conditions and the
simulation set up, including the choice of numerical schemes and the parameter
initialization. In the frame of this work, we considered four potential field
source surface based models and one fully MHD model, different types of global
magnetic field maps and model initiation parameters. After assessing the model
outputs using a variety of metrics, we conclude that they are highly comparable
regardless of the differences set at initiation. When comparing all models to
coronal hole boundaries extracted by extreme ultraviolet (EUV) filtergrams we
find that they do not compare well. This miss-match between observed and
modeled regions of open field is a candidate contributing to the open flux
problem. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2311.04024 |