[IGPP Everyone] Reminder - SPACE PHYSICS SEMINAR - Fall Quarter - Friday October 16, 2020 - 3:30pm - UCLA Zoom
Marjorie Sowmendran
margie at igpp.ucla.edu
Wed Oct 14 10:07:15 PDT 2020
R E M I N D E R
SPACE PHYSICS SEMINAR
ZOOM LINK PROVIDED BELOW
https://ucla.zoom.us/j/93382900867?pwd=TlVQRmZyVEJFa0FCZWlRMU0yREtjUT09
Date/Time: October 16, 2020/ 03:30 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)
SPACE PHYSICS SEMINAR
DEPARTMENT OF EARTH, PLANETARY, AND SPACE SCIENCES
DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC SCIENCES
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
Linking Coronal Heating to Magnetic Structure and Complexity
Cooper Downs, Predictive Sciences Inc, San Diego
The Sun ’s magnetic field plays a pivotal role in the processes that heat the corona and accelerate the solar wind. Understanding this interplay is essential for testing our theories of coronal heating and for developing state-of-the-art models that describe the corona and inner heliosphere. In this talk, I will outline the coronal heating problem from the perspective of global coronal modeling, and the ways in which we can learn about heating by studying realistic large-scale magnetic geometries. This includes the challenges of developing a physics-based model for heating that remains tractable for large scale magnetohydrodynamic calculations, and the subtle ways in which heating and the magnetic field may feed back on one another. Through this lens I will discuss our recent effort to link complexity in the surface magnetic field, such as small-scale flux elements and parasitic polarities, to the heating and hydrodynamics of the corona. Using the largest coronal simulation we've ever attempted, we show how the fine-scale structure of the field inherently leads to plasma inhomogeneities extending from the base of the corona to the solar wind. This has important implications for our understanding of coronal heating and for time-dependent dynamics that are observed throughout the corona and inner heliosphere.
Friday, October 16, 2020
3:30 - 5:00 PM
In-Charge: Marco Velli
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