Using Coordinated Observations in Polarised White Light and Faraday Rotation to Probe the Spatial Position and Magnetic Field of an Interplanetary Sheath
Ming Xiong (1, 2), Jackie A. Davies (3), Xueshang Feng (1), Mathew J., Owens (4), Richard A. Harrison (3), Chris J. Davis (4), Ying D. Liu ((1), State Key Laboratory of Space Weather, Center for Space Science, Applied, Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

TL;DR
This study combines white-light imaging and Faraday rotation measurements, supported by magnetohydrodynamic modeling, to locate and analyze the magnetic and plasma properties of interplanetary CME sheaths from multiple vantage points.
Contribution
It demonstrates how coordinated WL and FR observations can accurately determine the position, plasma mass, and magnetic field of CME sheaths in the inner heliosphere.
Findings
WL radiance decreases with distance as r^{-3}
L4 and L5 vantage points improve CME sheath viewing
Simultaneous WL and FR observations diagnose CME plasma and magnetic fields
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) can be continuously tracked through a large portion of the inner heliosphere by direct imaging in visible and radio wavebands. White-light (WL) signatures of solar wind transients, such as CMEs, result from Thomson scattering of sunlight by free electrons, and therefore depend on both the viewing geometry and the electron density. The Faraday rotation (FR) of radio waves from extragalactic pulsars and quasars, which arises due to the presence of such solar wind features, depends on the line-of-sight magnetic field component , and the electron density. To understand coordinated WL and FR observations of CMEs, we perform forward magnetohydrodynamic modelling of an Earth-directed shock and synthesise the signatures that would be remotely sensed at a number of widely distributed vantage points in the inner heliosphere. Removal of the background…
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