Earthbound Interplanetary shocks unconnected with coronal mass ejections

Timothy Howard, Stephen Tappin

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7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

An associated study by Howard and Tappin (2005) identified 7 Earthbound forward shocks (of which 3 were geoeffective) which were not connected with any detectable coronal mass ejection activity along the Sun-Earth line. This largely unexplored result lends evidence to the fact that some large interplanetary transients are not detected by coronagraphs. This letter explores two possibilities for the formation of the interplanetary foreward shock, namely Corotating Interaction Regions (CIR) or Erupting Magnetic Structures (EMS). Data from EPAM, SWEPAM and MAG on board ACE provided details of the interplanetary shock and associated energetic ions along the Sun-Earth line, while evidence of magnetic field reorientation at the Sun was investigated using EIT on board SOHO, the GOES network and ground-based H alpha and radio telescopes. No evidence was found to associate 6 of the shocks with CIRs, although we were uncertain about one event, and in each case evidence of chromospheric activity at the Sun was detected between the estimated onset time of the transient and the arrival of the shock at ACE. The nature of this surface activity included X-Ray (>= C5.0) and Ha flares, associated Type III and Type II radio bursts and disappearing filaments. These results lead to the proposal that EMS are the likely source of some interplanetary transients.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)L14106
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume32
Issue number14
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2005

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