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Orientations of LASCO Halo CMEs and their connection to the flux rope structure of interplanetary CMEs
Authors:V Yurchyshyn  Q Hu  RP Lepping  BJ Lynch  J Krall
Institution:

aBig Bear Solar Observatory, 40386 North Shore Lane, Big Bear City, CA 92314, USA

bIGPP, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA

cNASA, Goddard Space Flight Center, Code 696.0, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA

dSSL, University of California, Berkeley, 7 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

ePPL, Naval Research Laboratory, Code 6790, Washington, DC 20375-5000, USA

Abstract:Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) observed near the Sun via LASCO coronographic imaging are the most important solar drivers of geomagnetic storms. ICMEs, their interplanetary, near-Earth counterparts, can be detected in situ, for example, by the Wind and ACE spacecraft. An ICME usually exhibits a complex structure that very often includes a magnetic cloud (MC). They can be commonly modelled as magnetic flux ropes and there is observational evidence to expect that the orientation of a halo CME elongation corresponds to the orientation of the flux rope. In this study, we compare orientations of elongated CME halos and the corresponding MCs, measured by Wind and ACE spacecraft. We characterize the MC structures by using the Grad–Shafranov reconstruction technique and three MC fitting methods to obtain their axis directions. The CME tilt angles and MC fitted axis angles were compared without taking into account handedness of the underlying flux rope field and the polarity of its axial field. We report that for about 64% of CME–MC events, we found a good correspondence between the orientation angles implying that for the majority of interplanetary ejecta their orientations do not change significantly (less than 45 deg rotation) while travelling from the Sun to the near-Earth environment.
Keywords:Coronal mass ejection  Magnetic clouds
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