Coronal mass ejections and interplanetary shocks

Physics

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Interplanetary Space, Shock Wave Propagation, Solar Corona, Solar Flares, Stellar Mass Ejection, Helios Satellites, Radio Bursts, Solar Limb

Scientific paper

A comparison between Solwind observations of coronal mass ejections (CME's) and Helios 1 observations of interplanetary shocks during 1979-1982 indicates that 72 percent of the shocks were associated with large, low-latitude mass ejections on the nearby limb. Most of the associated CME's had speeds in excess of 500 km/s, but some of them had speeds in the range 200-400 km/s. An additional 26 percent of the shocks may have been associated with CME's, but we were less confident of these associations because the sizes and locations of the CME's did not seem appreciably different from those of the numerous CME's without Helios shocks. Only 2 percent of the shocks clearly lacked CME's. As the average level of sunspot activity declined during 1982, the shock frequency also declined, but the observed shocks and some of their associated CME's had unusually high speeds well in excess of 1000 km/s.

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