Assessment of the near-Sun magnetic field of the 10 March 2022 coronal mass ejection observed by Solar Orbiter
Shifana Koya, Spiros Patsourakos, Manolis K. Georgoulis, Alexander, Nindos

TL;DR
This study estimates the near-Sun magnetic field of a 2022 CME using Solar Orbiter data, modeling its evolution from the Sun to Earth, and finds a less steep decline than previously thought.
Contribution
It provides the first direct estimate of the CME's axial magnetic field at 0.03 AU and characterizes its radial decay using combined in situ measurements and modeling.
Findings
Estimated near-Sun axial magnetic field: 2067 ± 405 nT
Power-law index for magnetic field decline: -1.23 ± 0.18
Observed a significant decrease in AR helicity before eruption
Abstract
We estimate the near-Sun axial magnetic field of a coronal mass ejection (CME) on 10 March 2022. Solar Orbiter's in situ measurements, 7.8 degrees east of the Sun-Earth line at 0.43 AU, provided a unique vantage point, along with the WIND measurements at 0.99 AU. We determine a single power-law index from near-Sun to L1, including in situ measurements from both vantage points. We tracked the temporal evolution of the instantaneous relative magnetic helicity of the source active region (AR), NOAA AR 12962. By estimating the helicity budget of the pre-and post-eruption AR, we estimated the helicity transported to the CME. Assuming a Lundquist flux-rope model and geometrical parameters obtained through the graduated cylindrical shell (GCS) CME forward modelling, we determined the CME axial magnetic field at a GCS-fitted height. Assuming a power-law variation of the axial magnetic field…
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