In situ multi-spacecraft and remote imaging observations of the first CME detected by Solar Orbiter and BepiColombo
E. E. Davies (1), C. M\"ostl (2, 3), M. J. Owens (4), A. J. Weiss, (2, 3), T. Amerstorfer (2), J. Hinterreiter (2, 5), M. Bauer (2), R. L., Bailey (6), M. A. Reiss (2, 3), R. J. Forsyth (1), T. S. Horbury (1), H., O'Brien (1), V. Evans (1), V. Angelini (1), D. Heyner (7)

TL;DR
This study combines multi-spacecraft in situ and remote imaging data to analyze the shape, evolution, and magnetic properties of a CME, revealing non-self-similar expansion and a flattened cross-section.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-point analysis of a CME's global shape and magnetic field evolution using combined remote and in situ observations, with flux rope modeling.
Findings
Observed CME flattening and shape evolution through multi-spacecraft data.
Magnetic field strength decreases with distance at a rate different from previous studies.
CME expansion appears neither self-similar nor cylindrically symmetric.
Abstract
On 2020 April 19 a coronal mass ejection (CME) was detected in situ by Solar Orbiter at a heliocentric distance of about 0.8 AU. The CME was later observed in situ on April 20th by the Wind and BepiColombo spacecraft whilst BepiColombo was located very close to Earth. This CME presents a good opportunity for a triple radial alignment study, as the spacecraft were separated by less than 5 in longitude. The source of the CME, which was launched on April 15th, was an almost entirely isolated streamer blowout. STEREO-A observed the event remotely from -75.1 longitude, which is an exceptionally well suited viewpoint for heliospheric imaging of an Earth directed CME. The configuration of the four spacecraft has provided an exceptionally clean link between remote imaging and in situ observations of the CME. We have used the in situ observations of the CME at Solar Orbiter,…
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