Coronal electron density: Insights from radio and in situ observations, and EUHFORIA modeling
: Deshpande, Ketaki; Magdalenic, Jasmina; Christopher, Jebaraj Immanuel; Pavai, Valliappan Senthamizh; Niemela, Antonio; Rodriguez, Luciano; Krupar, Vratislav
Publisher: EDP Sciences
: 2025
Astronomy and Astrophysics
: A95
: 704
: 0004-6361
: 1432-0746
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202555142
: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202555142
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508266745
Context: The distribution of the coronal electron density at different distances from the Sun strongly influences the physical processes in the solar corona, and it is therefore a very important topic in solar physics. The majority of the methods used to estimate coronal electron density, including radio observations, were up to now not fully validated due to the absence of in situ observations closer to the Sun. Consequently, space weather forecasting models that simulate coronal density lacked proper validation. Newly available Parker Solar Probe (PSP) in situ observations at distances close to the Sun provide an opportunity to study the properties of plasma near the Sun and to compare observational and modeling results.
Aims: The focus of this work is to study type III radio bursts, estimate their propagation path, and validate the coronal electron density obtained from in situ radio observations and modeling with the EUropean Heliospheric FORecasting Information Asset (EUHFORIA).
Methods: In this study of type III radio bursts observed during the second PSP perihelion, we employ radio triangulation and modeling to analyze coronal electron density. Using the radio triangulation method, we determined the 3D positions of the radio sources. Additionally, we utilized the state-of-the-art EUHFORIA model to estimate electron densities at various locations. The electron densities derived from radio observations and EUHFORIA modeling were then inter-validated with in situ measurements from PSP.
Results: We studied 11 type III radio bursts during the second PSP perihelion, with radio triangulation showing their propagation path in the southward direction from the solar ecliptic plane. The obtained radio source sizes ranged from 0.5 to 40 deg (0.5–25 R⊙), showing no clear frequency dependence. This indicates that scattering of radio waves was not very significant for the studied events and in this frequency range. A comparison of electron densities derived from radio triangulation, in situ PSP data, and EUHFORIA modeling showed a large range of obtained values. This result is influenced by the different propagation paths across different coronal structures and model limitations. Despite these variations, EUHFORIA successfully identified high-density regions along type III burst paths, demonstrating its capability to capture large-scale density structures.
Conclusions: Our study emphasizes that type III bursts do not always follow the Parker spiral but instead trace distinct magnetic field lines that can be very differently oriented. The study shows constant radio source sizes and confirms that small-scale density fluctuations in PSP data remain relatively low. These two characteristics indicate that scattering effects do not significantly change observed radio source positions within the studied distances.
:
K.D. is supported by the Ph.D. grant awarded by Royal Observatory of Belgium. The authors also acknowledge financial support by the BRAIN.be project SWIM, University start-up grant 3E220031 and the FEDtWIN project PERIHELION. The ROB team thanks the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO) for the provision of financial support in the framework of the PRODEX Programme of the European Space Agency (ESA) under contract numbers 4000112292, 4000134088, 4000106864, 4000134474, and 4000136424. J.M. and I.C.J. were supported by the International Space Science Institute (ISSI) in Bern, through ISSI International Team project No.557, “Beam-Plasma Interaction in the Solar Wind and the Generation of Type III Radio Bursts”. I.C.J. is grateful for support by the Research Council of Finland (X-Scale, grant No. 371569). I.C.J also acknowledges funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under
grant agreement No. 101134999 (SOLER).