On the Propagation of a Geoeffective Coronal Mass Ejection during March 15 -- 17, 2015
Yuming Wang, Quanhao Zhang, Jiajia Liu, Chenglong Shen, Fang Shen,, Zicai Yang, T. Zic, B. Vrsnak, D. F. Webb, Rui Liu, S. Wang, Jie Zhang, Qiang, Hu, Bin Zhuang

TL;DR
This study investigates the propagation of a March 2015 CME that unexpectedly caused a major geomagnetic storm, combining imaging, in-situ measurements, and modeling to understand its trajectory and deflection.
Contribution
It integrates multi-method observations and simulations to analyze CME propagation and deflection, revealing how eastward deflection increased its geoeffectiveness.
Findings
CME propagated westward at 817 km/s before leaving the corona.
In-situ data showed the CME experienced eastward deflection near 1 AU.
Trajectory modeling suggests a 12° eastward deflection increased geomagnetic impact.
Abstract
The largest geomagnetic storm so far in the solar cycle 24 was produced by a fast coronal mass ejection (CME) originating on 2015 March 15. It was an initially west-oriented CME and expected to only cause a weak geomagnetic disturbance. Why did this CME finally cause such a large geomagnetic storm? We try to find some clues by investigating its propagation from the Sun to 1 AU. First, we reconstruct the CME's kinematic properties in the corona from the SOHO and SDO imaging data with the aid of the graduated cylindrical shell (GCS) model. It is suggested that the CME propagated to the west away from the Sun-Earth line with a speed of about 817 km s before leaving the field of view of the SOHO/LASCO C3 camera. A magnetic cloud (MC) corresponding to this CME was measured in-situ by the Wind spacecraft two days later. By applying two MC reconstruction…
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