Magnetohydrodynamic Simulation of the Interaction between Interplanetary Strong Shock and Magnetic Cloud and its Consequent Geoeffectiveness 2: Oblique Collision
Ming Xiong (1), Huinan Zheng (1), Yuming Wang (1), Shui Wang (1) ((1), University of Science, Technology of China, Hefei, China)

TL;DR
This study uses 2.5D MHD simulations to analyze how oblique shocks interact with magnetic clouds in interplanetary space, revealing effects on morphology, deflection, and geoeffectiveness.
Contribution
It provides new insights into oblique shock-MC interactions, especially regarding deflection angles and geoeffectiveness, extending previous studies focused on direct collisions.
Findings
Shock front behaves as a smooth arc during interaction.
Maximum geoeffectiveness occurs when shock penetrates the MC core.
Larger shock intensity causes greater MC deflection.
Abstract
Numerical studies of the interplanetary "shock overtaking magnetic cloud (MC)" event are continued by a 2.5 dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model in heliospheric meridional plane. Interplanetary direct collision (DC)/oblique collision (OC) between an MC and a shock results from their same/different initial propagation orientations. For radially erupted MC and shock in solar corona, the orientations are only determined respectively by their heliographic locations. OC is investigated in contrast with the results in DC \citep{Xiong2006}. The shock front behaves as a smooth arc. The cannibalized part of MC is highly compressed by the shock front along its normal. As the shock propagates gradually into the preceding MC body, the most violent interaction is transferred sideways with an accompanying significant narrowing of the MC's angular width. The opposite deflections of MC body and…
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