arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:0904.2366 [astro-ph.SR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Relationship between earth-directed solar eruptions and magnetic clouds at 1AU: A brief review

Vasyl Yurchyshyn, Durgesh Tripathi

Published 2009-04-15Version 1

We review relationships between coronal mass ejections (CMEs), EIT post eruption arcades, and the coronal neutral line associated with global magnetic field and magnetic clouds near the Earth. Our previous findings indicate that the orientation of a halo CME elongation may correspond to the orientation of the underlyig flux rope. Here we revisit these preliminary reports by comparing orientation angles of elongated LASCO CMEs, both full and partial halos, to the post eruption arcades. Based on 100 analysed events, it was found that the overwhelming majority of halo CMEs are elongated in the direction of the axial field of the post eruptio arcades. Moreover, this conclusion also holds for partial halo CMEs as well as for events that originate further from the disk center. This suggests that the projection effect does not drastically change the appearance of full and partial halos and their imagesstill bear reliable information about the underlying magnetic fields. We also compared orientations of the erupted fields near the Sun and in the interplanetary space and found that the local tiltof the coronal neutral line at 2.5 solar radii is well correlated with the magnetic cloud axis measured near the Earth. We suggest that the heliospheric magnetic fields significantly affect the propagating ejecta. Sometimes, the ejecta may even rotate so that its axis locally aligns itself with the heliospheric current sheet.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1108.0951 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2011-08-03)
Dynamical evolution of a magnetic cloud from the Sun to 5.4 AU
arXiv:0904.0766 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2009-04-05)
Magnetohydrodynamic Simulation of the Interaction between Interplanetary Strong Shock and Magnetic Cloud and its Consequent Geoeffectiveness 2: Oblique Collision
arXiv:2205.13438 [astro-ph.SR] (Published 2022-05-26)
Toward Realistic Models of Core Collapse Supernovae: A Brief Review