# Corrugated Features in Coronal-mass-ejections-driven Shocks: A   Discussion on the Predisposition to Particle Acceleration

**Authors:** A. P\'aez, V. Jatenco-Pereira, D. Falceta-Gon\c{c}alves, M. Opher

arXiv: 1907.07884 · 2019-07-24

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how corrugated, wave-like features in CME-driven shocks influence particle acceleration, emphasizing the role of shock morphology and disturbances in the solar corona.

## Contribution

It introduces a model of corrugated shocks with wave-like disturbances and analyzes their impact on particle acceleration processes in the low corona.

## Key findings

- Corrugated shocks have varied shock normal angles affecting acceleration regions.
- Irregular CME expansion disturbances influence particle acceleration predisposition.
- Corrugated features may be key to understanding shock stability and particle injection.

## Abstract

The study of the acceleration of particles is an essential element of research in the heliospheric science. Here, we discuss the predisposition to the particle acceleration around coronal mass ejections (CMEs)-driven shocks with corrugated wave-like features. We adopt these attributes on shocks formed from disturbances due to the bimodal solar wind, CME deflection, irregular CME expansion, and the ubiquitous fluctuations in the solar corona. In order to understand the role of a wavy shock in particle acceleration, we define three initial smooth shock morphologies each one associated with a fast CME. Using polar Gaussian profiles we model these shocks in the low corona. We establish the corrugated appearance on smooth shock by using combinations of wave-like functions that represent the disturbances from medium and CME piston. For both shock types, smooth and corrugated, we calculate the shock normal angles between the shock normal and the radial upstream coronal magnetic field in order to classify the quasi-parallel and quasi-perpendicular regions. We consider that corrugated shocks are predisposed to different process of particle acceleration due to irregular distributions of shock normal angles around of the shock. We suggest that disturbances due to CME irregular expansion may be a decisive factor in origin of particle acceleration. Finally, we regard that accepting these features on shocks may be the start point for investigating some questions in the sheath and shock, like downstream-jets, instabilities, shock thermalization, shock stability, and injection particle process.

## Full text

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## Figures

11 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.07884/full.md

## References

69 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.07884/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.07884