Difference between revisions of "02/13/2013 17:00:00 UTC"

From heliophysics
Jump to: navigation, search
(In-Situ Data)
(Comment Section)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
=Comment Section=
 
=Comment Section=
 
+
*It is difficult to see a lot in the heliospheric imagers corresponding to this event. My best guess is that, if there is a CME driver for this event, it is a plasma blob that can barely be seen late on the 10th, and it takes more than a full day to accelerate out of the COR2 field of view. It was very faint and weak and barely seen by LASCO. After not taking more than a day to get out of COR2, it picks up enough speed to reach the Earth in less than 2 days. The blob may have been accelerated by another CME that occurred on the 12th. (Hess)
  
 
=Image Data=
 
=Image Data=

Revision as of 16:32, 3 July 2013

Comment Section

  • It is difficult to see a lot in the heliospheric imagers corresponding to this event. My best guess is that, if there is a CME driver for this event, it is a plasma blob that can barely be seen late on the 10th, and it takes more than a full day to accelerate out of the COR2 field of view. It was very faint and weak and barely seen by LASCO. After not taking more than a day to get out of COR2, it picks up enough speed to reach the Earth in less than 2 days. The blob may have been accelerated by another CME that occurred on the 12th. (Hess)

Image Data

In-Situ Data

A combination of SWEPAM and MAG data from the ACE Satellite:

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Error creating thumbnail: File missing


The blue lines are an approximation of the CME cloud and the red line denotes the shock.

Video Data

References