Causes and Consequences of Magnetic Complexity Changes within Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections: a Statistical Study
Camilla Scolini, R\'eka M. Winslow, No\'e Lugaz, Tarik M. Salman, Emma, E. Davies, Antoinette B. Galvin

TL;DR
This study statistically analyzes how interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) change their magnetic complexity during propagation, revealing that most alterations are driven by interactions with solar wind structures and are partly detectable at 1 au.
Contribution
First comprehensive statistical analysis linking ICME magnetic complexity changes to solar wind interactions using multi-spacecraft data and simulations.
Findings
~65% of ICMEs change complexity between Mercury and 1 au.
Interactions with large-scale solar wind structures drive complexity changes.
ICMEs may be magnetically coherent over at least 15 degrees.
Abstract
We present the first statistical analysis of complexity changes affecting the magnetic structure of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs), with the aim of answering the questions: How frequently do ICMEs undergo magnetic complexity changes during propagation? What are the causes of such changes? Do the in situ properties of ICMEs differ depending on whether they exhibit complexity changes? We consider multi-spacecraft observations of 31 ICMEs by MESSENGER, Venus Express, ACE, and STEREO between 2008 and 2014 while radially aligned. By analyzing their magnetic properties at the inner and outer spacecraft, we identify complexity changes which manifest as fundamental alterations or significant re-orientations of the ICME. Plasma and suprathermal electron data at 1 au, and simulations of the solar wind enable us to reconstruct the propagation scenario for each event, and to identify…
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