A Helicity-Based Method to Infer the CME Magnetic Field Magnitude in Sun and Geospace: Generalization and Extension to Sun-Like and M-Dwarf Stars and Implications for Exoplanet Habitability
S. Patsourakos, M. K. Georgoulis

TL;DR
This paper extends a helicity-based method to estimate CME magnetic fields, generalizes it to various flux-rope configurations and star types, and discusses implications for exoplanet habitability and atmospheric erosion.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized framework for inferring CME magnetic fields across different flux-rope models and star types, enhancing understanding of space weather impacts on exoplanets.
Findings
Earth unlikely to face severe magnetospheric compression from superflares
Exoplanets Kepler 438b and Proxima b are in atmospheric erosion zones unless they have strong magnetic fields
The method's dependence on flux-rope configuration affects magnetic field estimates.
Abstract
Patsourakos et al. (Astrophys. J. 817, 14, 2016) and Patsourakos and Georgoulis (Astron. Astrophys. 595, A121, 2016) introduced a method to infer the axial magnetic field in flux-rope coronal mass ejections (CMEs) in the solar corona and farther away in the interplanetary medium. The method, based on the conservation principle of magnetic helicity, uses the relative magnetic helicity of the solar source region as input estimates, along with the radius and length of the corresponding CME flux rope. The method was initially applied to cylindrical force-free flux ropes, with encouraging results. We hereby extend our framework along two distinct lines. First, we generalize our formalism to several possible flux-rope configurations (linear and nonlinear force-free, non-force-free, spheromak, and torus) to investigate the dependence of the resulting CME axial magnetic field on input…
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