English

Defining the Middle Corona

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2023-06-16 v2 Space Physics

Abstract

The middle corona, the region roughly spanning heliocentric altitudes from 1.51.5 to 6R6\,R_\odot, encompasses almost all of the influential physical transitions and processes that govern the behavior of coronal outflow into the heliosphere. Eruptions that could disrupt the near-Earth environment propagate through it. Importantly, it modulates inflow from above that can drive dynamic changes at lower heights in the inner corona. Consequently, this region is essential for comprehensively connecting the corona to the heliosphere and for developing corresponding global models. Nonetheless, because it is challenging to observe, the middle corona has been poorly studied by major solar remote sensing missions and instruments, extending back to the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SoHO) era. Thanks to recent advances in instrumentation, observational processing techniques, and a realization of the importance of the region, interest in the middle corona has increased. Although the region cannot be intrinsically separated from other regions of the solar atmosphere, there has emerged a need to define the region in terms of its location and extension in the solar atmosphere, its composition, the physical transitions it covers, and the underlying physics believed to be encapsulated by the region. This paper aims to define the middle corona and give an overview of the processes that occur there.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2208.04485,
  title  = {Defining the Middle Corona},
  author = {Matthew J. West and Daniel B. Seaton and David B. Wexler and John C. Raymond and Giulio Del Zanna and Yeimy J. Rivera and Adam R. Kobelski and Craig DeForest and Leon Golub and Amir Caspi and Chris R. Gilly and Jason E. Kooi and Benjamin L. Alterman and Nathalia Alzate and Dipankar Banerjee and David Berghmans and Bin Chen and Lakshmi Pradeep Chitta and Cooper Downs and Silvio Giordano and Aleida Higginson and Russel A. Howard and Emily Mason and James P. Mason and Karen A. Meyer and Katariina Nykyri and Laurel Rachmeler and Kevin P. Reardon and Katharine K. Reeves and Sabrina Savage and Barbara J. Thompson and Samuel J. Van Kooten and Nicholeen M. Viall and Angelos Vourlidas},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2208.04485},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

Working draft prepared by the middle corona heliophysics working group

R2 v1 2026-06-25T01:35:03.323Z