Observing Solar Coronal Mass Ejections from Space
Philippe Lamy

TL;DR
This paper reviews the history, current catalogs, achievements, and future prospects of space-based white-light observations of solar coronal mass ejections, highlighting challenges and directions for future research.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of space observations of CMEs, including historical context, existing catalogs, and future challenges and opportunities.
Findings
Extensive catalogs of CMEs have been developed from space observations.
Space-based white-light observations have significantly advanced understanding of CMEs.
Future missions face challenges but hold promise for improved CME detection and analysis.
Abstract
In this contribution to the panel discussion of the IAU Symposium 388 "Solar and Stellar Coronal Mass Ejections", I concentrate on white-light observations of solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) from space and specifically address the following aspects: i) history of observations, ii) available catalogs of CMEs, iii) achievements of space observations of CMEs, iv) future of CME observation, and v) challenges and future directions.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
