论文标题
冠状质量弹出的演变和相应的福布降低:建模与多飞机运动物观测值
Evolution of coronal mass ejections and the corresponding Forbush decreases: modelling vs multi-spacecraft observations
论文作者
论文摘要
星际冠状质量弹出(ICME)以及其他行星际瞬变的最常见的原位特征之一是Forbush减少(FDS),即银河系宇宙射线(GCR)的短期减少。两步的FD通常被视为教科书示例,大概应该将其特定的形态视为以下事实:测量工具通过ICME直接通过ICME,首先遇到了冲击阵线(如果开发),则是护套,最后是CME磁性结构。 GCR和冲击/护套区域的相互作用以及CME磁性结构从太阳到地球一直发生,因此,FDS有望反映CMES及其鞘的进化特性。我们将建模应用于不同的ICME区域,以获取通用的两步FD轮廓,该轮廓定性地与我们当前基于观察的FD的理解一致。接下来,我们适应了能量依赖的模型,以使其与不同的GCR测量仪器(在不同的粒子能量范围内测量)进行比较。我们使用扩展的通量绳(ForbMod)的Forbush减少模型(ForbMod)测试了同一事件的一组多飞机运动物观察的这些建模工作。我们发现,具有多飞机运动物测量值的CME磁性结构中GCR抑郁的ForBMOD模型合理的一致性,表明建模的FDS很好地反映了CME的演化。
One of the very common in situ signatures of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs), as well as other interplanetary transients, are Forbush decreases (FDs), i.e. short-term reductions in the galactic cosmic ray (GCR) flux. A two-step FD is often regarded as a textbook example, which presumably owes its specific morphology to the fact that the measuring instrument passed through the ICME head-on, encountering first the shock front (if developed), then the sheath and finally the CME magnetic structure. The interaction of GCRs and the shock/sheath region, as well as the CME magnetic structure, occurs all the way from Sun to Earth, therefore, FDs are expected to reflect the evolutionary properties of CMEs and their sheaths. We apply modelling to different ICME regions in order to obtain a generic two-step FD profile, which qualitatively agrees with our current observation-based understanding of FDs. We next adapt the models for energy dependence to enable comparison with different GCR measurement instruments (as they measure in different particle energy ranges). We test these modelling efforts against a set of multi-spacecraft observations of the same event, using the Forbush decrease model for the expanding flux rope (ForbMod). We find a reasonable agreement of the ForbMod model for the GCR depression in the CME magnetic structure with multi-spacecraft measurements, indicating that modelled FDs reflect well the CME evolution.