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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: Abstract We present a statistical study of interplanetary conditions and geospace response to 89 coronal mass ejection (CME)‐driven sheaths observed during Solar Cycles 23 and 24. We investigate in particular the dependencies on the driver properties and variations across the sheath. We find that the ejecta speed principally controls the sheath geoeffectiveness and shows the highest correlations with sheath parameters, in particular in the region closest to the shock. Sheaths of fast ejecta have on average high solar wind speeds, magnetic (B)‐field magnitudes, and fluctuations and they generate efficiently strong out‐of‐ecliptic fields. Slow‐ejecta sheaths are considerably slower, have weaker fields and field fluctuations and therefore they cause primarily moderate geospace activity. Sheaths of weak and strong B‐field ejecta have distinct properties but differences in their geoeffectiveness are less drastic. Sheaths of fast and strong ejecta push the subsolar magnetopause significantly earthward, often even beyond geostationary orbit. Slow‐ejecta sheaths also compress the magnetopause significantly due to their large densities that likely result of their relatively long propagation times and source near the streamer belt. We find the regions near the shock and ejecta leading edge to be the most geoeffective parts of the sheath. These regions are also associated with the largest B‐field magnitudes, out‐of‐ecliptic fields, and field fluctuations as well as largest speeds and densities. The variations, however, depend on driver properties. Forecasting sheath properties is challenging due to their variable nature, but the dependence on ejecta properties determined in this work could help to estimate sheath geoeffectiveness through remote‐sensing CME observations.
    Print ISSN: 1539-4964
    Electronic ISSN: 1542-7390
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-02-22
    Description: The magnetosheath plays a central role in the solar wind-magnetospheric coupling. Yet the effects of its crossing on solar wind structures such as magnetic clouds (MCs) is generally overlooked when assessing their geoeffectivity. Using 82 MCs observed simultaneously in the solar wind and the magnetosheath, we carry out the first statistical study of the alteration of their magnetic structure in the magnetosheath. For each event, the bow shock properties are obtained from a magnetosheath model. The comparison between the model results and observations shows that in 80% of cases, the MHD-based model captures well the magnetosheath transition; the other events are discussed separately. We find that just downstream of the bow shock the variation of the magnetic field direction shows a very good anti-correlation ( r =− 0.91) with the angle between the upstream magnetic field and the shock normal. We then focus on the magnetic field North-South component B z because of its importance for geoeffectivity. Although the sign of B z is generally preserved in the magnetosheath, we also find evidence of long-lasting intervals of opposite B z signs in the solar wind and the magnetosheath during some events, with a | B z | reversal 〉10 nT at the magnetopause. We find that these reversals are due to the draping of the field lines and are associated with predominant upstream B y . In those cases, the estimated position of the regions of anti-parallel fields along the magnetopause is independent of the sign of the upstream B z . This may have strong implications in terms of reconnection.
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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