Unprecedented Multipoint Observation of Spatially Varying ICME Turbulence of Different Ages during October 2024 Extreme Solar Storm at 1 AU
Shibotosh Biswas, Ankush Bhaskar, SG Abitha, Omkar Dhamane, Sanchita Pal, Dibyendu Chakrabarty, Vipin K Yadav

TL;DR
This study presents the first multipoint measurements of ICME turbulence at 1 AU during a major solar storm, revealing significant spatial variability and internal plasma processes affecting space weather.
Contribution
It provides novel multipoint magnetic turbulence analysis across ICME regions using four spacecraft, highlighting spatial variability and internal reconnection processes.
Findings
Significant turbulence variability across small separations.
Sheath turbulence is modified by shock energy injection.
Internal reconnection influences ICME plasma evolution.
Abstract
Understanding turbulence in interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) is fundamental to space plasma research and critical for assessing the impact of space weather on geospace. Turbulence governs energy cascade, plasma heating, magnetic reconnection, and solar wind magnetosphere coupling, thereby influencing both ICME evolution and geoeffectiveness. While previous event based and statistical studies have examined ICME turbulence and its radial evolution in great detail, no significant measurements of ICME magnetic turbulence at a single vantage point have been obtained from multiple observatories separated azimuthally. Here, we present the first multipoint analysis of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence across ICME plasma regions, using four spacecraft at the Sun-Earth L1 point, separated by 80 RE (mesoscale) along the dawn-dusk direction. Using high-resolution magnetic field…
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