Magnetohydrodynamic simulation of the interaction between two interplanetary magnetic clouds and its consequent geoeffectiveness
Ming Xiong (1,2), Huinan Zheng (1,2), S. T. Wu (3), Yuming Wang (1),, Shui Wang (1) ((1) University of Science, Technology of China, Hefei, (2), State Key Laboratory of Space Weather, Beijing, (3) University of Alabama in, Huntsville, Huntsville)

TL;DR
This study uses 2.5D MHD simulations to analyze how two interacting interplanetary magnetic clouds evolve and influence space weather, highlighting the importance of their interaction dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed MHD simulation framework for multiple magnetic cloud interactions and identifies key physical factors affecting their geoeffectiveness.
Findings
Interaction causes significant compression of magnetic clouds.
Evolution stage influences geoeffectiveness more than collision intensity.
Magnetic elasticity and helicity are crucial for cloud evolution.
Abstract
Numerical studies of the interplanetary "multiple magnetic clouds (Multi-MC)" are performed by a 2.5-dimensional ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model in the heliospheric meridional plane. Both slow MC1 and fast MC2 are initially emerged along the heliospheric equator, one after another with different time interval. The coupling of two MCs could be considered as the comprehensive interaction between two systems, each comprising of an MC body and its driven shock. The MC2-driven shock and MC2 body are successively involved into interaction with MC1 body. The momentum is transferred from MC2 to MC1. After the passage of MC2-driven shock front, magnetic field lines in MC1 medium previously compressed by MC2-driven shock are prevented from being restored by the MC2 body pushing. MC1 body undergoes the most violent compression from the ambient solar wind ahead, continuous penetration of…
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