Published December 23, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Comparative Study of Data-driven Solar Coronal Field Models Using a Flux Emergence Simulation as a Ground-truth Data Set

  • 1. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
  • 2. National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
  • 3. Lockheed Martin Solar & Astrophysics Lab
  • 4. Harbin Institute of Technology
  • 5. Nanjing University
  • 6. NorthWest Research Associates
  • 7. Nagoya University
  • 1. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
  • 2. National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
  • 3. Lockheed Martin Solar & Astrophysics Laboratory
  • 4. Harbin Institute of Technology
  • 5. Nanjing University
  • 6. NorthWest Research Associates
  • 7. Nagoya University

Description

For a better understanding of magnetic field in the solar corona and dynamic activities such as flares and coronal mass ejections, it is crucial to measure the time-evolving coronal field and accurately estimate the magnetic energy. Recently, a new modeling technique called the data-driven coronal field model, in which the time evolution of magnetic field is driven by a sequence of photospheric magnetic and velocity field maps, has been developed and revealed the dynamics of flare-productive active regions. Here we report on the first qualitative and quantitative assessment of different data-driven models using a magnetic flux emergence simulation as a ground-truth (GT) data set. We compare the GT field with those reconstructed from the GT photospheric field by four data-driven algorithms. It is found that, at least, the flux rope structure is reproduced in all coronal field models. Quantitatively, however, the results show a certain degree of model dependence. In most cases, the magnetic energies and relative magnetic helicity are comparable to or at most twice of the GT values. The reproduced flux ropes have a sigmoidal shape (consistent with GT) of various sizes, a vertically-standing magnetic torus, or a packed structure with curled field lines. The observed discrepancies can be attributed to the highly non-force-free input photospheric field, from which the coronal field is reconstructed, and to the modeling constraints such as the treatment of background atmosphere, the bottom boundary setting, and the spatial resolution.

Notes

Boundary data and file I/O routines for the data-driven models discussed in Toriumi et al. (ApJ, 2020).

Files

Files (3.8 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:eb4063c02dad83c656358f98e94fe777
641.3 MB Download
md5:94c0b06091e454dfb5a15436c5e56e8a
641.3 MB Download
md5:8f2ba2056838cf6a9224dd5cbc7052c9
641.3 MB Download
md5:e90a981467c8e1881ca410191ae17caf
4.1 kB Download
md5:57c29a27286de10e189cc3614cf92b25
391 Bytes Download
md5:cc668617ad176c69edfb072e4cef7569
496 Bytes Download
md5:00ec612b86d7709720e717a28b3810c4
641.3 MB Download
md5:29196f582626c0fb2469070f51b2a399
641.3 MB Download
md5:d729e44d8c83688f314c486b462c5b50
641.3 MB Download
md5:2b62470b5224c35c836ee1ed8796c2e2
5.3 kB Download
md5:8c0ec153492693164ec4c09495063a3e
5.3 kB Download