Magnetic Flux of EUV Arcade and Dimming Regions as a Relevant Parameter for Early Diagnostics of Solar Eruptions - Sources of Non-Recurrent Geomagnetic Storms and Forbush Decreases
I. M. Chertok, V. V. Grechnev, A. V. Belov, A. A. Abunin

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the magnetic flux in EUV dimming and arcade regions can be used to predict the intensity and timing of major non-recurrent geomagnetic storms and Forbush decreases, enabling early space weather diagnostics.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative method linking solar eruption magnetic flux to space weather disturbance parameters, improving early prediction capabilities.
Findings
Magnetic flux correlates with GMS and FD magnitudes.
Larger flux leads to stronger GMS and FD, shorter transit times.
Predictions can be made 1-4 days in advance.
Abstract
This study aims at the early diagnostics of geoeffectiveness of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) from quantitative parameters of the accompanying EUV dimming and arcade events. We study events of the 23th solar cycle, in which major non-recurrent geomagnetic storms (GMS) with Dst <-100 nT are sufficiently reliably identified with their solar sources in the central part of the disk. Using the SOHO/EIT 195 A images and MDI magnetograms, we select significant dimming and arcade areas and calculate summarized unsigned magnetic fluxes in these regions at the photospheric level. The high relevance of this eruption parameter is displayed by its pronounced correlation with the Forbush decrease (FD) magnitude, which, unlike GMSs, does not depend on the sign of the Bz component but is determined by global characteristics of ICMEs. Correlations with the same magnetic flux in the solar source region…
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.
