CME-CME Interactions as Sources of CME Geo-effectiveness: The Formation of the Complex Ejecta and Intense Geomagnetic Storm in Early September 2017
Camilla Scolini, Emmanuel Chan\'e, Manuela Temmer, Emilia K. J., Kilpua, Karin Dissauer, Astrid M. Veronig, Erika Palmerio, Jens Pomoell,, Mateja Dumbovi\'c, Jingnan Guo, Luciano Rodriguez, Stefaan Poedts

TL;DR
This study investigates how interactions between successive CMEs in September 2017 amplified their magnetic fields, significantly increasing their geo-effectiveness and leading to an intense geomagnetic storm at Earth, using global heliospheric simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the role of CME-CME interactions in enhancing magnetic fields and geo-effectiveness, validated through EUHFORIA simulations of a real event.
Findings
CME interactions can amplify magnetic fields up to 2.8 times.
The timing of CME interactions influences their impact at Earth.
Simulation results match observed geomagnetic storm intensity.
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are the primary sources of intense disturbances at Earth, where their geo-effectiveness is largely determined by their dynamic pressure and internal magnetic field, which can be significantly altered during interactions with other CMEs in interplanetary space. We analyse three successive CMEs that erupted from the Sun during September 4-6, 2017, investigating the role of CME-CME interactions as source of the associated intense geomagnetic storm (Dst_min=-142 nT on September 7). To quantify the impact of interactions on the (geo-)effectiveness of individual CMEs, we perform global heliospheric simulations with the EUHFORIA model, using observation-based initial parameters with the additional purpose of validating the predictive capabilities of the model for complex CME events. The simulations show that around 0.45 AU, the shock driven by the September 6 CME…
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