Properties of stream interaction regions at Earth and Mars during the declining phase of SC 24
Paul Geyer, Manuela Temmer, Jingnan Guo, Stephan G. Heinemann

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of stream interaction regions (SIRs) from Earth to Mars during the declining phase of solar cycle 24, revealing how their properties change with distance and the influence of solar features.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of SIRs at two heliospheric distances, combining in-situ and remote sensing data to understand their evolution and associated solar phenomena.
Findings
The magnetic field and total pressure at SIRs increase by about 45% from Earth to Mars.
The crest of high-speed solar wind streams broadens by approximately 17% between Earth and Mars.
Occurrence rate of fast shocks is three times higher at Mars than at Earth.
Abstract
We inspect the evolution of SIRs from Earth to Mars (distance range 1-1.5 AU) over the declining phase of solar cycle 24 (2014-2018). So far, studies only analyzed SIRs measured at Earth and Mars at different times. We compare existing catalogs for both heliospheric distances and arrive at a clean dataset for the identical time range. This allows a well-sampled statistical analysis and for the opposition phases of the planets an in-depth analysis of SIRs as they evolve with distance. We use in-situ solar wind data from OMNI and the MAVEN spacecraft as well as remote sensing data from SDO. A superposed epoch analysis is performed for bulk speed, proton density, temperature, magnetic field magnitude and total perpendicular pressure. Additionally, a study of events during the two opposition phases of Earth and Mars in the years 2016 and 2018 is conducted. SIR related coronal holes with…
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