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Abundance variations in the solar wind
Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..15g...3V

Geiss, J.; Gloeckler, G.; von Steiger, R. +1 more

The solar wind (SW) allows us to probe the solar material in situ, particularly its composition, without the need to fly a spacecraft to inhospitably small heliocentric distances. However, it turns out that this plasma source is biased with respect to the photosphere. Elements with a low first ionization potential (FIP) are overabundant by a facto…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 52
ULYSSES observations of latitude gradients in the heliospheric magnetic field
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(95)00328-C Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i.165S

Phillips, J.; Balogh, A.; Tsurutani, B. T. +3 more

Several parameters measured by Ulysses as it traveled southward to heliographic latitudes of -50 deg are presented and analyzed. The radial component of the magnetic field, averaged over 5 deg latitude increments and extrapolated back to 1 AU, is found to agree with baseline measurements provided by IMP-8. There is little, if any, evidence of a la…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 18
ULYSSES solar wind plasma observations during the declining phase of solar cycle 22
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(95)00318-9 Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i..85P

McComas, D. J.; Goldstein, B. E.; Bame, S. J. +5 more

Since launch in October 1990, the Ulysses mission has included an in-ecliptic cruise enroute to Jupiter encounter in February 1992 and a post-Jupiter transit through a wide range of southerly latitudes and heliocentric distances. Here we present results from the solar wind plasma experiment through June 14, 1994, at which time Ulysses was at -68.2…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 18
Solar wind plasma electron parameters based on aligned observations by ICE and ULYSSES
Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i..95P

Scime, E. E.; Phillips, J. L.; Gosling, J. T. +1 more

During November-December 1991, the International Cometary Explorer and Ulysses spacecraft were aligned in solar longitude, with an angular offset as small as 1 deg and a radial offset of 3.8 to 4.0 AU. Both spacecraft carry spectrometers which measure the thermal and suprathermal solar wind electron distributions. During the alignment interval, bo…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 17
The anomalous nuclear component in the three-dimensional heliosphere
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(95)00326-A Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i.135S

Simpson, J. A.

The anomalous nuclear component is neither of solar nor galactic cosmic ray origin. Its presence in the heliosphere is an independent probe for both interplanetary electrodynamical investigations--especially solar modulation--and probably the most direct means for determining the elemental and isotopic composition of those neutral atoms in the loc…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 14
Interplanetary shocks observed by ULYSSES in the ecliptic plane as a function of the heliocentric distance
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(94)00119-L Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..15h.371H

Balogh, A.; Pantellini, F.; Forsyth, R. J. +5 more

During its mission in the ecliptic plane, the Ulysses spacecraft crossed many heliospheric large-scale structures. Several interplanetary (IP) shocks were identified and characterized using the radio receiver, magnetometer and proton analyser aboard. The spectroscopy of the thermal noise measured by the radio receiver gives the plasma electron den…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 11
Magnetic observations during the recent declining phase of solar activity
Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i.153S

Smith, E. J.

Changes in the heliospheric magnetic field during the recent declining phase in solar activity are reviewed and compared with observations during past sunspot cycles. The study is based principally on data obtained by IMP-8 and Ulysses. The field magnitude is found to have increased during the declining phase until it reached a maximum value of 11…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 8
Acceleration of solar wind ions by oblique interplanetary shocks
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(94)00121-G Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..15h.385B

Forsyth, R.; Baring, M. G.; Ogilvie, K. W. +1 more

This paper compares observations of proton distributions made by the SWICS ion mass spectrometer on Ulysses at nearby interplanetary shocks with Monte Carlo simulations of particle acceleration at oblique collisionless shocks. The shock parameters are obtained from upstream measurements of the solar wind and magnetic field, and the input particles…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 7
Expanding our knowledge of the heliosphere
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(95)00310-B Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i...5P

Page, D. E.

Milestones on our road to understanding the heliosphere between 1950 and 1988 are recalled. Among these are early studies of solar energetic particles suggesting a heliospheric boundary at 5 AU, the discovery of the solar wind and the sectored nature of the interplanetary magnetic field. Recent results, particularly from the Ulysses spacecraft, co…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 6
ULYSSES energetic ion observations during the declining phase of solar cycle 22
DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(95)00348-I Bibcode: 1995AdSpR..16i.267S

Sanderson, T. R.

The Ulysses spacecraft was launched in October 1990, just after the maximum of solar cycle 22. Part of the journey to Jupiter was during one of the most active periods of solar activity recorded so far. Solar activity remained exceptionally high for many months after launch, solar energetic particles dominating the particle observations at Ulysses…

1995 Advances in Space Research
Ulysses 6