Modelling a multi-spacecraft coronal mass ejection encounter with EUHFORIA
E. Asvestari, J. Pomoell, E. Kilpua, S. Good, T. Chatzistergos, M., Temmer, E. Palmerio, S. Poedts, and J. Magdalenic

TL;DR
This study evaluates the EUHFORIA model's ability to simulate a specific CME event from 2013, focusing on its magnetic structure and propagation, and compares predictions with actual spacecraft observations.
Contribution
It introduces the application of the spheromak CME model within EUHFORIA to reconstruct and analyze a well-observed CME event, highlighting its predictive capabilities and limitations.
Findings
Model predicts CME arrival within a day of observed times.
CME primarily propagates southward in the model, consistent with observations.
Magnetic field profiles are sensitive to the spheromak radius and orientation.
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are a manifestation of the Sun's eruptive nature. They can have a great impact on Earth, but also on human activity in space and on the ground. Therefore, modelling their evolution as they propagate through interplanetary space is essential. EUropean Heliospheric FORecasting Information Asset (EUHFORIA) is a data-driven, physics-based model, tracing the evolution of CMEs through background solar wind conditions. It employs a spheromak flux rope, which provides it with the advantage of reconstructing the internal magnetic field configuration of CMEs. This is something that is not included in the simpler cone CME model used so far for space weather forecasting. This work aims at assessing the spheromak CME model included in EUHFORIA. We employed the spheromak CME model to reconstruct a well observed CME and compare model output to in situ observations. We…
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