Advancing In Situ Modeling of ICMEs: New Techniques for New Observations
Tamitha Mulligan, Alysha A. Reinard, Benjamin J. Lynch

TL;DR
This paper introduces innovative modeling techniques for analyzing multi-spacecraft observations of ICMEs, enhancing understanding of their three-dimensional structure and interaction with solar wind, demonstrated through case studies from STEREO data.
Contribution
The paper develops new non-force-free flux rope and plasma flow deflection models, along with a spatial mapping technique, to improve ICME structure analysis from multi-spacecraft data.
Findings
Better constraints on large-scale ICME structure
Enhanced visualization of ICME geometry and dynamics
Improved interpretation of flux rope sub-structures
Abstract
It is generally known that multi-spacecraft observations of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) more clearly reveal their three-dimensional structure than do observations made by a single spacecraft. The launch of the STEREO twin observatories in October 2006 has greatly increased the number of multipoint studies of ICMEs in the literature, but this field is still in its infancy. To date, most studies continue to use on flux rope models that rely on single track observations through a vast, multi-faceted structure, which oversimplifies the problem and often hinders interpretation of the large-scale geometry, especially for cases in which one spacecraft observes a flux rope, while another does not. In order to tackle these complex problems, new modeling techniques are required. We describe these new techniques and analyze two ICMEs observed at the twin STEREO spacecraft on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
