Quantifying errors in 3D CME parameters derived from synthetic data using white-light reconstruction techniques

ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH(2023)

引用 10|浏览27
暂无评分
摘要
Current efforts in space weather forecasting of CMEs have been focused on predicting their arrival time and magnetic structure. To make these predictions, methods have been developed to derive the true CME speed, size, position, and mass, among others. Difficulties in determining the input parameters for CME forecasting models arise from the lack of direct measurements of the coronal magnetic fields and uncertainties in estimating the CME 3D geometric and kinematic parameters after eruption. White-light coronagraph images are usually employed by a variety of CME reconstruction techniques that assume more or less complex geometries. This is the first study from our International Space Science Institute (ISSI) team "Understanding Our Capabilities in Observing and Modeling Coronal Mass Ejections", in which we explore how subjectivity affects the 3D CME parameters that are obtained from the Graduated Cylindrical Shell (GCS) reconstruction technique, which is widely used in CME research. To be able to quantify such uncertainties, the "true" values that are being fitted should be known, which are impossible to derive from observational data. We have designed two different synthetic sce-narios where the "true" geometric parameters are known in order to quantify such uncertainties for the first time. We explore this by using two sets of synthetic data: 1) Using the ray-tracing option from the GCS model software itself, and 2) Using 3D magnetohydro-dynamic (MHD) simulation data from the Magnetohydrodynamic Algorithm outside a Sphere code. Our experiment includes different viewing configurations using single and multiple viewpoints. CME reconstructions using a single viewpoint had the largest errors and error ranges overall for both synthetic GCS and simulated MHD white-light data. As the number of viewpoints increased from one to two, the errors decreased by approximately 4 degrees in latitude, 22 degrees in longitude, 14 degrees in tilt, and 10 degrees in half-angle. Our results quantitatively show the critical need for at least two viewpoints to be able to reduce the uncertainty in deriving CME parameters. We did not find a significant decrease in errors when going from two to three viewpoints for our specific hypothetical three spacecraft scenario using synthetic GCS white-light data. As we expected, considering all configurations and numbers of viewpoints, the mean absolute errors in the measured CME parameters are generally significantly higher in the case of the simulated MHD white-light data compared to those from the synthetic white-light images generated by the GCS model. We found the following CME parameter error bars as a starting point for quantifying the minimum error in CME parameters from white-light reconstructions: Delta theta (latitude)=6 degrees(+2 degrees)(-3 degrees), Delta phi (longitude)=11(-6 degrees)(+18 degrees), Delta gamma (tilt)=25 degrees(+8 degrees)(-7 degrees), Delta alpha(half-angle)=10 degrees(+12 degrees)(-6 degrees), Delta h (height)=0.6(-0.4)(+1.2)R(circle dot), and Delta kappa (ratio)=0.1(-0.02)(+0.03). (c) 2022 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier B.V.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Coronal mass ejections,Solar corona,Remote-sensing observations
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要