0000000000139657

AUTHOR

S. R. Crothers

showing 10 related works from this author

The Heliospheric Imagers Onboard the STEREO Mission

2008

Mounted on the sides of two widely separated spacecraft, the two Heliospheric Imager (HI) instruments onboard NASA’s STEREO mission view, for the first time, the space between the Sun and Earth. These instruments are wide-angle visible-light imagers that incorporate sufficient baffling to eliminate scattered light to the extent that the passage of solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) through the heliosphere can be detected. Each HI instrument comprises two cameras, HI-1 and HI-2, which have 20° and 70° fields of view and are off-pointed from the Sun direction by 14.0° and 53.7°, respectively, with their optical axes aligned in the ecliptic plane. This arrangement provides coverage over solar…

PhysicsData processingMission operationsSpacecraftbusiness.industryEclipticAstronomy and AstrophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceLine (geometry)CalibrationCoronal mass ejectionbusinessHeliosphereRemote sensingSolar Physics
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Coronal mass ejections in the heliosphere

2010

With the advent of the NASA STEREO mission, we are in a position to perform unique investigations of the evolution of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) as they propagate through the heliosphere, and thus can investigate the relationship between CMEs and their interplanetary counterparts, so-called interplanetary CMEs (ICMEs). ICME studies have been principally limited to single-point, in-situ observations; interpretation of the in-situ characteristics of ICMEs has been used to derive a range of ICME properties which we can now confirm or refute using the STEREO imaging data. This paper is a review of early STEREO CME observations and how they relate to our currently understanding of ICMEs based…

PhysicsAtmospheric ScienceEvent (relativity)Aerospace EngineeringAstronomyAstronomy and AstrophysicsAstrophysicsFuture studyGeophysicsStereo imagingSpace and Planetary ScienceCoronal mass ejectionGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesSpace researchInterplanetary spaceflightHeliosphereAdvances in Space Research
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A multispacecraft analysis of a small-scale transient entrained by solar wind streams

2009

The images taken by the Heliospheric Imagers (HIs), part of the SECCHI imaging package onboard the pair of STEREO spacecraft, provide information on the radial and latitudinal evolution of the plasma compressed inside corotating interaction regions (CIRs). A plasma density wave imaged by the HI instrument onboard STEREO-B was found to propagate towards STEREO-A, enabling a comparison between simultaneous remote-sensing and in situ observations of its structure to be performed. In situ measurements made by STEREO-A show that the plasma density wave is associated with the passage of a CIR. The magnetic field compressed after the CIR stream interface (SI) is found to have a planar distribution…

PhysicsExtraterrestrial Physics Space SciencesOrbital planecoronal mass ejection [Interplanetary medium]PhysicsStellar magnetic fieldAstronomyFluxAstronomy and AstrophysicsPlasmaAstrophysicsMagnetic fieldComputational physicsMeteorology/ClimatologySolar windSpace and Planetary SciencePhysics::Space Physicsmagnetic field [Sun]Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsHeliospheric current sheetMagnetic cloudAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysicscorotating interaction regions [Sun]
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First imaging of corotating interaction regions using the STEREO spacecraft

2008

Plasma parcels are observed propagating from the Sun out to the large coronal heights monitored by the Heliospheric Imagers (HI) instruments onboard the NASA STEREO spacecraft during September 2007. The source region of these out-flowing parcels is found to corotate with the Sun and to be rooted near the western boundary of an equatorial coronal hole. These plasma enhancements evolve during their propagation through the HI cameras' fields of view and only becoming fully developed in the outer camera field of view. We provide evidence that HI is observing the formation of a Corotating Interaction Region (CIR) where fast solar wind from the equatorial coronal hole is interacting with the slow…

PhysicsSpacecraftbusiness.industryInstrumentationCoronal holeAstronomyField of viewPlasmaHelmet streamerSolar windGeophysicsPhysics::Plasma PhysicsPhysics::Space PhysicsAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary AstrophysicsbusinessPhysics::Atmospheric and Oceanic PhysicsHeliosphereGeophysical Research Letters
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First Imaging of Coronal Mass Ejections in the Heliosphere Viewed from Outside the Sun – Earth Line

2007

We show for the first time images of solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) viewed using the Heliospheric Imager (HI) instrument aboard the NASA STEREO spacecraft. The HI instruments are wide-angle imaging systems designed to detect CMEs in the heliosphere, in particular, for the first time, observing the propagation of such events along the Sun – Earth line, that is, those directed towards Earth. At the time of writing the STEREO spacecraft are still close to the Earth and the full advantage of the HI dual-imaging has yet to be realised. However, even these early results show that despite severe technical challenges in their design and implementation, the HI instruments can successfully detec…

PhysicsBrightnessSpacecraftbusiness.industryAstronomyAstronomy and AstrophysicsSolar radiusTracking (particle physics)law.inventionSpace and Planetary SciencelawCoronal mass ejectionbusinessCoronagraphHeliosphereLine (formation)Solar Physics
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First Direct Observation of the Interaction between a Comet and a Coronal Mass Ejection Leading to a Complete Plasma Tail Disconnection

2007

This a discovery report of the first direct imaging of the interaction a comet with a coronal mass ejection (CME) in the inner heliosphere with high temporal and spatial resolution. The observations were obtained by the Sun-Earth Connection Coronal and Heliospheric Investigation (SECCHI) Heliospheric Imager-1 (HI-1) aboard the STEREO mission. They reveal the extent of the plasma tail of comet 2P/Encke to unprecedented lengths and allow us to examine the mechanism behind a spectacular tail disconnection event. Our preliminary analysis suggests that the disconnection is driven by magnetic reconnection between the magnetic field entrained in the CME and the interplanetary field draped around t…

PhysicsSolar windSpace and Planetary ScienceCometCoronal mass ejectionAstronomyAstronomy and AstrophysicsMagnetic reconnectionPlasmaInterplanetary spaceflightHeliosphereMagnetic fieldThe Astrophysical Journal
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A solar storm observed from the Sun to Venus using the STEREO, Venus Express, and MESSENGER spacecraft

2009

The suite of SECCHI optical imaging instruments on the STEREO-A spacecraft is used to track a solar storm, consisting of several coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and other coronal loops, as it propagates from the Sun into the heliosphere during May 2007. The 3-D propagation path of the largest interplanetary CME (ICME) is determined from the observations made by the SECCHI Heliospheric Imager (HI) on STEREO-A (HI-1/2A). Two parts of the CME are tracked through the SECCHI images, a bright loop and a V-shaped feature located at the rear of the event. We show that these two structures could be the result of line-of-sight integration of the light scattered by electrons located on a single flux rop…

Atmospheric ScienceSoil ScienceInterplanetary mediumVenusAquatic ScienceSpace weatherOceanographyGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Coronal mass ejectionAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and TechnologyPhysicsEcologybiologyPaleontologyAstronomyForestryCoronal loopbiology.organism_classificationSolar windGeophysicsSpace and Planetary SciencePhysics::Space PhysicsInterplanetary spaceflightHeliosphereJournal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
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A SELF-SIMILAR EXPANSION MODEL FOR USE IN SOLAR WIND TRANSIENT PROPAGATION STUDIES

2012

Since the advent of wide-angle imaging of the inner heliosphere, a plethora of techniques have been developed to investigate the three-dimensional structure and kinematics of solar wind transients, such as coronal mass ejections, from their signatures in single- and multi-spacecraft imaging observations. These techniques, which range from the highly complex and computationally intensive to methods based on simple curve fitting, all have their inherent advantages and limitations. In the analysis of single-spacecraft imaging observations, much use has been made of the fixed fitting (FPF) and harmonic mean fitting (HMF) techniques, in which the solar wind transient is considered to be a radial…

Physics010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbusiness.industryPoint sourcePlane (geometry)Monte Carlo methodAstronomy and Astrophysics01 natural sciencesComputational physicsSolar windOpticsSpace and Planetary SciencePhysics::Space Physics0103 physical sciencesCurve fittingCoronal mass ejectionTransient (oscillation)business010303 astronomy & astrophysicsHeliosphere0105 earth and related environmental sciencesThe Astrophysical Journal
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A synoptic view of solar transient evolution in the inner heliosphere using the Heliospheric Imagers on STEREO

2009

[1] By exploiting data from the STEREO/heliospheric imagers (HI) we extend a well-established technique developed for coronal analysis by producing time-elongation plots that reveal the nature of solar transient activity over a far more extensive region of the heliosphere than previously possible from coronagraph images. Despite the simplicity of these plots, their power in demonstrating how the plethora of ascending coronal features observed near the Sun evolve as they move antisunward is obvious. The time-elongation profile of a transient tracked by HI can, moreover, be used to establish its angle out of the plane-of-the-sky; an illustration of such analysis reveals coronal mass ejection …

PhysicsAstronomySolar physicslaw.inventionSolar windGeophysicslawTrajectoryCoronal mass ejectionGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesTransient (oscillation)EjectaCoronagraphHeliosphereGeophysical Research Letters
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Intermittent release of transients in the slow solar wind: 1. Remote sensing observations

2010

[1] The Heliospheric Imager (HI) instruments on board the STEREO spacecraft are used to analyze the solar wind during August and September 2007. We show how HI can be used to image the streamer belt and, in particular, the variability of the slow solar wind which originates inside and in the vicinity of the streamer belt. Intermittent mass flows are observed in HI difference images, streaming out along the extension of helmet streamers. These flows can appear very differently in images: plasma distributed on twisted flux ropes, V-shaped structures, or “blobs.” The variety of these transient features may highlight the richness of phenomena that could occur near helmet streamers: emergence of…

Atmospheric ScienceAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaSoil ScienceFluxInterplanetary mediumAquatic ScienceOceanographyPhysics::Plasma PhysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsInterplanetary magnetic fieldEjectaEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and TechnologyPhysicsEcologyPaleontologyAstronomyForestryHelmet streamerCoronaSolar windGeophysicsSpace and Planetary SciencePhysics::Space PhysicsOutflowAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary AstrophysicsJournal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
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