Numerical Simulation of an EUV Coronal Wave Based on the February 13, 2009 CME Event Observed by STEREO
Ofer Cohen, Gemma D.R. Attrill, Ward B. Manchester IV, Meredith J., Wills-Davey

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations constrained by STEREO observations to analyze a 2009 CME event, revealing that coronal waves involve both wave and non-wave mechanisms and are driven by magnetic reconnection.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel, observation-constrained 3D MHD model that demonstrates the combined wave and non-wave nature of coronal EUV waves during a CME event.
Findings
Simulation reproduces observed diffuse coronal bright front.
Coronal waves involve both wave and non-wave mechanisms.
Magnetic reconnection facilitates CME expansion and large-scale coronal restructuring.
Abstract
On 13 February 2009, a coronal wave -- CME -- dimming event was observed in quadrature by the STEREO spacecraft. We analyze this event using a three-dimensional, global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model for the solar corona. The numerical simulation is driven and constrained by the observations, and indicates where magnetic reconnection occurs between the expanding CME core and surrounding environment. We focus primarily on the lower corona, extending out to ; this range allows simultaneous comparison with both EUVI and COR1 data. Our simulation produces a diffuse coronal bright front remarkably similar to that observed by STEREO/EUVI at 195 \AA. It is made up of \emph{two} components, and is the result of a combination of both wave and non-wave mechanisms. The CME becomes large-scale quite low ( 200 Mm) in the corona. It is not, however, an inherently large-scale event;…
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