Quasi-periodic Variations of Coronal Mass Ejections with Different Angular Widths
Xia Li, Hui Deng, Feng Wang, Linhua Deng, Ying Mei

TL;DR
This study analyzes 25 years of CME data to identify quasi-periodic variations linked to different angular widths, revealing multiple periodicities and hemisphere-specific patterns that relate to solar magnetic activity and space weather.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of CME quasi-periodicities based on angular widths and hemispheric differences, extending previous findings with new periodicities and cycle-specific patterns.
Findings
Identified multiple CME periodicities including 9 months, 1.7 years, and 3.3-4.3 years.
Discovered hemisphere-specific and cycle-specific CME periodicities.
Linked CME quasi-periodicities to solar magnetic activity and space weather phenomena.
Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are energetic expulsions of organized magnetic features from the Sun. The study of CME quasi-periodicity helps establish a possible relationship between CMEs, solar flares, and geomagnetic disturbances. We used the angular width of CMEs as a criterion for classifying the CMEs in the study. Based on 25 years of observational data, we systematically analyzed the quasi-periodic variations corresponding to the CME occurrence rate of different angular widths in the northern and southern hemispheres, using frequency and time-frequency analysis methods. There are various periods for CMEs of different angular widths: 9 months, 1.7 years, and 3.3-4.3 years. Compared with previous studies based on the occurrence rate of CMEs, we obtained the same periods of 1.2(+-0.01) months, 3.1(+-0.04) months, ~6.1(+-0.4) months, 1.2(+-0.1) years, and 2.4(+-0.4) years. We also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
