论文标题
20年的ACE数据:超跨时期分析如何揭示行星际CME轮廓中的通用特征
20 Years of ACE Data: How Superposed Epoch Analyses Reveal Generic Features in Interplanetary CME Profiles
论文作者
论文摘要
星际冠状动脉质量弹出(ICME)是从太阳的电晕到星际介质的磁性结构。在L1库点进行了20多年的观察,ACE提供了数百个在几个太阳周期中的不同时间检测到的ICME,并且具有不同的特征,例如传播速度。我们使用超塑性时期方法研究了磁和等离子体参数分布的最可能的值,研究了400多个ICME的重新访问目录。我们还研究了ICME相对于太阳风,太阳周期以及通用ICME轮廓上磁云的存在的速度的影响。我们发现快速传播的ICME(相对与前面的太阳风)仍然显示在1 Au处的压缩迹象,如压缩鞘和磁场的不对称曲线所示。尽管太阳周期的演化不会影响ICME的通用特征,但在周期的活动部分中存在更多的极端事件,从而扩大了所有参数的分布。最后,我们发现有或没有检测到的磁云的ICMES显示出相似的轮廓,这证实了以下假设:未检测到的磁云的ICME越过远离通量绳芯。这样的研究提供了对塑造太阳风中ICME的整体特征的过程的一般理解,并且可以通过太阳系不同位置的未来任务扩展。
Interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) are magnetic structures propagating from the Sun's corona to the interplanetary medium. With over 20 years of observations at the L1 libration point, ACE offers hundreds of ICMEs detected at different times during several solar cycles and with different features such as the propagation speed. We investigate a revisited catalog of more than 400 ICMEs using the superposed epoch method on the mean, median, and the most probable values of the distribution of magnetic and plasma parameters. We also investigate the effects of the speed of ICMEs relative to the solar wind, the solar cycle, and the existence of a magnetic cloud on the generic ICME profile. We find that fast-propagating ICMEs (relatively to the solar wind in front) still show signs of compression at 1 au, as seen by the compressed sheath and the asymmetric profile of the magnetic field. While the solar cycle evolution does not impact the generic features of ICMEs, there are more extreme events during the active part of the cycle, widening the distributions of all parameters. Finally, we find that ICMEs with or without a detected magnetic cloud show similar profiles, which confirms the hypothesis that ICMEs with no detected magnetic clouds are crossed further away from the flux rope core. Such a study provides a generic understanding of processes that shape the overall features of ICMEs in the solar wind and can be extended with future missions at different locations in the solar system.