Which Photospheric Characteristics are Most Relevant to Active-Region Coronal Mass Ejections?
Ioannis Kontogiannis, Manolis K. Georgoulis, Jordan A. Guerra,, Sung-Hong Park, D. Shaun Bloomfield

TL;DR
This study identifies key photospheric magnetic features, especially non-neutralized currents and MPIL length, that strongly correlate with CME characteristics, enhancing understanding of active-region eruptive potential.
Contribution
It introduces new parameterizations of magnetic topology, particularly non-neutralized currents, and demonstrates their strong correlation with CME properties, improving predictive insights.
Findings
Non-neutralized currents strongly correlate with fast CMEs.
MPIL length is a significant predictor of eruptive potential.
Combined parameters improve CME eruption prediction.
Abstract
We investigate the relation between characteristics of coronal mass ejections and parameterizations of the eruptive capability of solar active regions widely used in solar flare prediction schemes. These parameters, some of which are explored for the first time, are properties related to topological features, namely, magnetic polarity inversion lines (MPILs) that indicate large amounts of stored non-potential (i.e. free) magnetic energy. We utilize the Space Weather Database of Notifications, Knowledge, Information (DONKI) and the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronograph (LASCO) databases to find flare-associated coronal mass ejections and their kinematic characteristics while properties of MPILs are extracted from Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) vector magnetic-field observations of active regions to extract the properties of source-region MPILs. The correlation between all…
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