Global axis shape of magnetic clouds deduced from the distribution of their local axis orientation
Miho Janvier, Pascal Demoulin, Sergio Dasso

TL;DR
This study derives the global shape of magnetic cloud axes from local measurements and compares in-situ data with imager observations, providing a robust mean shape useful for space weather and energetic particle studies.
Contribution
It introduces a method to infer the global flux rope axis shape from local measurements and validates it with both in-situ and imager data, including a specific event analysis.
Findings
Derived a mean axis shape from orientation distribution
Found no dependence on flux-rope inclination
Confirmed shape consistency with heliospheric imager observations
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are routinely tracked with imagers in the interplanetary space while magnetic clouds (MCs) properties are measured locally by spacecraft. However, both imager and insitu data do not provide direct estimation on the global flux rope properties. The main aim of this study is to constrain the global shape of the flux rope axis from local measurements, and to compare the results from in-situ data with imager observations. We perform a statistical analysis of the set of MCs observed by WIND spacecraft over 15 years in the vicinity of Earth. With the hypothesis of having a sample of MCs with a uniform distribution of spacecraft crossing along their axis, we show that a mean axis shape can be derived from the distribution of the axis orientation. In complement, while heliospheric imagers do not typically observe MCs but only their sheath region, we analyze one…
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