In Situ Properties of Small and Large Flux Ropes in the Solar Wind
M. Janvier, P. Demoulin, S. Dasso

TL;DR
This study compares small flux ropes and magnetic clouds in the solar wind, revealing they share underlying physics despite differences in size, expansion signatures, and properties, and traces of their ejection process are observed.
Contribution
It demonstrates that small flux ropes and magnetic clouds are governed by similar physics, with correlations indicating a common ejection process, and provides insights into their large-scale structure and interaction with the solar wind.
Findings
Small flux ropes and magnetic clouds share similar propagation physics.
No in situ expansion signatures are observed for small flux ropes.
Flux rope radius, velocity, and magnetic field are positively correlated.
Abstract
Two populations of twisted magnetic field tubes, or flux ropes (hereafter, FRs), are detected by in situ measurements in the solar wind. While small FRs are crossed by the observing spacecraft within few hours, with a radius typically less than 0.1AU, larger FRs, or magnetic clouds (hereafter, MCs), have durations of about half a day. The main aim of this study is to compare the properties of both populations of FRs observed by the Wind spacecraft at 1 AU. To do so, we use standard correlation techniques for the FR parameters, as well as histograms and more refined statistical methods. Although several properties seem at first different for small FRs and MCs, we show that they are actually governed by the same propagation physics. For example, we observe no in situ signatures of expansion for small FRs, contrary to MCs. We demonstrate that this result is in fact expected: small FRs…
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