Title:
Radial Evolution of Coronal Mass Ejections in the Inner Heliosphere: Catalog and Analysis
Poster
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Abstract
Our knowledge of the properties of Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) in the inner heliosphere is constrained by the relative lack of plasma observations between the Sun and 1 AU. We present a comprehensive catalog of 47 CMEs measured in situ measurements by two or more radially aligned spacecraft (MESSENGER, Venus Express, STEREO, or Wind/ACE). We estimate the CME impact speeds at Mercury and Venus using a drag based model and present an average propagation profile of CMEs (speed and deceleration) in the inner heliosphere. We find that CME deceleration continues past Mercury's orbit but most of the deceleration occurs between the Sun and Mercury. We examine the exponential decrease of the maximum magnetic field strength with heliocentric distance using two approaches: a statistical method and
analysis from individual conjunction events. Findings from both the approaches are on average consistent with previous studies but show significant event-to-event variability. We also find the expansion of the CME sheath to be well fit by a linear function. However, we observe the average sheath duration and its increase to be fairly independent of the initial CME speed, contradicting commonly held knowledge that slow CMEs drive larger sheaths. We also present an analysis of the 3 November 2011 CME observed in longitudinal conjunction between MESSENGER, Venus Express and STEREO-B focusing on the expansion of the CME and its correlation with the exponential fall off of the maximum magnetic field strength in the ejecta.
Authors
First Name |
Last Name |
Tarik Mohammad
|
Salman
|
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Submission Details
Conference GRC
Event Graduate Research Conference
Department Physics and Astronomy (GRC)
Group Poster Presentation
Added April 14, 2020, 7:26 p.m.
Updated April 15, 2020, 3:54 a.m.
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