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Assessing the effect of spacecraft motion on single-spacecraft solar wind tracking techniques

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posted on 2014-07-18, 10:34 authored by Thomas Michael Conlon, Stephen E. Milan, J. A. Davies
Recent advances in wide-angle imaging by the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) on board the Coriolis spacecraft and more recently by the Heliospheric Imagers (HI) aboard NASA's Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory (STEREO), have enabled solar wind transients to be imaged and tracked from the Sun to 1 AU and beyond. In this paper we consider two of the techniques that have been used to determine the propagation characteristics of solar wind transients based on single-spacecraft observations, in particular propagation direction and radial speed. These techniques usually assume that the observing spacecraft remains stationary for the duration of observation of the solar wind transient. We determine the inaccuracy introduced by this assumption for the two STEREO spacecraft and find that it can be significant, and it can lead to an overestimation of the transient velocity as seen from STEREO-A and an underestimation as seen by STEREO-B. This has implications for the prediction or solar wind transients at 1 AU and hence is important for the study of space weather.

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Citation

Solar Physics, 2014, 289 (10), pp. 3935-3947

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Solar Physics

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

issn

0038-0938

eissn

1573-093X

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2014-07-18

Publisher version

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11207-014-0549-z

Language

en

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