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Abstract This study presents observations of a large pseudostreamer solar eruption and, in particular, the post-eruption relaxation phase, as captured by Metis, on board the Solar Orbiter, on 2022 October 12, during its perihelion passage. Utilizing total-brightness data, we observe the outward propagation of helical features up to 3 solar radii along a radial column that appears to correspond to the stalk of the pseudostreamer. The helical structures persisted for more than 3 hr following a jet-like coronal mass ejection associated with a polar crown prominence eruption. A notable trend is revealed: the inclination of these features decreases as their polar angle and height increase. Additionally, we measured their helix pitch. Despite the 2 minute time cadence limiting direct correspondence among filamentary structures in consecutive frames, we find that the Metis helical structure may be interpreted as a consequence of twist (nonlinear torsional Alfvén waves) and plasma liberated by interchange reconnection. A comparison was performed between the helix parameters as outlined by fine-scale outflow features and those obtained from synthetic white-light images derived from the high-resolution magnetohydrodynamics simulation of interchange reconnection in a pseudostreamer topology by P. F. Wyper et al. A remarkable similarity between the simulation-derived images and the observations was found. We conjecture that these Metis observations may represent the upper ends of the spatial and energy scales of the interchange reconnection process that has been proposed recently as the origin of the Alfvénic solar wind.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 26, 2026
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Telloni, D.; Antonucci, E.; Adhikari, L.; Zank, G. P.; Giordano, S.; Vai, M.; Zhao, L.-L.; Andretta, V.; Burtovoi, A.; Capuano, G. E.; et al (, Astronomy & Astrophysics)Context. The fast solar wind is known to emanate from polar coronal holes. Aims. This Letter reports the first estimate of the expansion rate of polar coronal flows performed by the Metis coronagraph on board Solar Orbiter. Methods. By exploiting simultaneous measurements in polarized white light and ultraviolet intensity of the neutral hydrogen Lyman- α line, it was possible to extend observations of the outflow velocity of the main component of the solar wind from polar coronal holes out to 5.5 R ⊙ , the limit of diagnostic applicability and observational capabilities. Results. We complement the results obtained with analogous polar observations performed with the UltraViolet Coronagraph Spectrometer on board the SOlar and Heliospheric Observatory during the previous full solar activity cycle, and find them to be satisfactorily reproduced by a magnetohydrodynamic turbulence model. Conclusions. This suggests that the dissipation of 2D turbulence energy is a viable mechanism for coronal plasma heating and the subsequent acceleration of the fast solar wind.more » « less
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