Oct 27 – 31, 2025
Europe/Stockholm timezone

A Novel Flux Rope Model for Simulating Sun-to-Earth Propagation of CMEs

Not scheduled
1h 15m
Tonsalen

Tonsalen

Poster CD5 - Open Validation in Space Weather Modeling CD5 - Open Validation in Space Weather Modeling

Speaker

Ranadeep Sarkar (University of Helsinki)

Description

One of the major challenges in space weather forecasting is to reliably predict the magnetic structure of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) in the near-Earth space. In the framework of global MHD modelling, several efforts have been made to model the CME magnetic field from Sun to Earth. However, it remains challenging to deduce a flux-rope solution that can reliably model the magnetic structure of a CME. Aiming to improve the space-weather forecasting capability, we implement a new flux-rope model in “European heliospheric forecasting information asset” (EUHFORIA). Our flux-rope model includes an initially force-free toroidal flux-rope that is embedded in the low-coronal magnetic field. The embedding technique adds a significant novelty to the state-of-the-art as it preserves the continuity condition of the magnetic field at the flux-rope boundary and maintains the force-free solution of the flux rope. The dynamics of the flux rope in the low and middle corona are solved by a non-uniform advection constrained by the observed kinematics of the event. This results in a global non-toroidal loop-like magnetic structure that locally manifests as a cylindrical structure. At heliospheric distances, the evolution is modeled as a MHD process using EUHFORIA. We assess our model results on several ICMEs, including cases of interacting events. Comparing the model results with the in-situ magnetic field configuration of the ICME at 1 au, we find that the simulated magnetic field profiles of the flux-rope are in very good agreement with the in-situ observations. Therefore, the framework of toroidal model implementation as developed in this study could prove to be a major step-forward in forecasting the geo-effectiveness of CMEs.

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Primary author

Ranadeep Sarkar (University of Helsinki)

Co-authors

Jens Pomoell (University of Helsinki, Finland) Emilia Kilpua (University of Helsinki, Finland) Eleanna Asvestari (University of Helsinki)

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