Thermal properties of interplanetary coronal mass ejections at 1 AU and their connection to geoeffectiveness across solar cycles 23-25
Soumyaranjan Khuntia, and Wageesh Mishra

TL;DR
This study analyzes the thermal evolution of interplanetary coronal mass ejections at 1 AU across solar cycles 23-25, revealing their active thermodynamic states, cycle-dependent heating and cooling behaviors, and their connection to geoeffectiveness.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive statistical analysis of ICME thermal states using proton polytropic index, highlighting cycle-dependent thermal behaviors and their relation to geoeffective magnetic structures.
Findings
45% of MEs exhibit heating states.
Gamma_p increases from 1.49 to 1.88 across cycles.
High-impact ICMEs are predominantly heating MEs with magnetic clouds.
Abstract
Interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) are major drivers of heliospheric variability and can produce prolonged disturbances near Earth. Understanding their thermodynamic evolution is crucial for assessing their heat budget and exploring how thermal states relate to their plasma dynamics and geoeffectiveness. We conduct a comprehensive statistical analysis of magnetic ejecta (MEs) over Solar Cycles 23, 24, and the ascending phase of 25. Leveraging a polytropic framework, we characterized the thermal state of ME based on the event-wise median proton polytropic index (Gamma_p) from in-situ measurements at 1 AU. We find that MEs are thermodynamically active and rarely evolve adiabatically or isothermally. Notably, a significant fraction (45%) of MEs exhibit a heating state. Heating MEs dominate near solar maxima and exhibit strong solar-cycle modulation in Gamma_p, proton…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
