Effects of background solar wind and drag force on the propagation of coronal mass ejection driven shock
Chin-Chun Wu (1), Kan Liou (2), Brian E. Wood (1), Lynn Hutting (1), ((1) Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA, (2) Applied Physics, Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University, Laurel, Maryland, USA)

TL;DR
This study investigates how background solar wind conditions and drag forces influence the propagation and arrival timing of CME-driven shocks from the Sun to Earth, combining observational data and MHD simulations.
Contribution
It highlights the significant role of ambient solar wind speed and drag force in determining shock propagation and arrival times, extending understanding beyond initial CME speeds.
Findings
Faster upstream solar wind correlates with shock propagation differences.
Drag force influences shock deceleration and timing.
Simulation results support observational analysis.
Abstract
Propagation of interplanetary (IP) shocks, particularly those driven by coronal mass ejections (CMEs), is still an outstanding question in heliophysics and space weather forecasting. Here we address effects of the ambient solar wind on the propagation of two similar CME-driven shocks from the Sun to Earth. The two shock events (CME03: April 3, 2010 and CME12: July 12, 2012) have the following properties: Both events (1) were driven by a halo CME (i.e., source location is near the Sun-Earth line), (2) had a CME source in the southern hemisphere, (3) had a similar transit time (~2 days) to Earth, (4) occurred in a non-quiet solar period, and (5) led to a severe geomagnetic storm. The initial (near the Sun) propagation speed, as measured by coronagraph images, was slower (by ~300 km/s) for CME03 than CME12, but it took about the same amount of traveling time for both events to reach Earth.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
