Properties of a Coronal Shock Wave as A Driver of Early SEP Acceleration
Kamen A. Kozarev, John C. Raymond, Vasili V. Lobzin, Michael Hammer

TL;DR
This study combines remote solar observations and data-driven models to analyze a coronal shock wave's properties, revealing its evolution and connectivity, which are crucial for understanding and forecasting solar energetic particle acceleration.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method integrating geometric and magnetic field models to estimate coronal shock properties and connectivity during CME events.
Findings
The shock was weak with an initial speed of ~450 km/s.
It transitioned from quasi-parallel to quasi-perpendicular configuration.
Good magnetic connectivity to near-Earth space was observed later in the event.
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are thought to drive collisionless shocks in the solar corona, which in turn have been shown capable of accelerating solar energetic particles (SEPs) in minutes. It has been notoriously difficult to extract information about energetic particle spectra in the corona, due to lack of in-situ measurements. It is possible, however, to combine remote observations with data-driven models in order to deduce coronal shock properties relevant to the local acceleration of SEPs and their heliospheric connectivity to near-Earth space. We present such novel analysis applied to the May 11, 2011 CME event on the western solar limb, focusing on the evolution of the eruption-driven, dome-like shock wave observed by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) EUV telescopes on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft. We analyze the shock evolution and estimate its strength…
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