Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1777255 Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The fact that magnetic clouds are one of the main sources causing geomagnetic storms is a well-established fact. One of the issues is to establish those features of magnetic clouds determinant in the intensity of the Dst corresponding to geomagnetic storms. We examine measurements of geoeffective magnetic clouds during the period 1995–2006 providing geomagnetic storms with Dst indexes lower than −100 nT. These involve 46 geomagnetic storm events. After establishing the different characteristics of the magnetic clouds (plasma velocity, maximum magnetic intensity, etc.) we show some results about the correlations found among them and the storms intensity, finding that maximum magnetic field magnitude is a determinant factor to establish the importance of magnetic clouds in generating geomagnetic storms, having a correlation as good as the electric convective field.

► Relationship between magnetic clouds and geomagnetic storms. ► Analyzed magnetic clouds with intensity lower than −100 nT. ► Maximum magnetic field magnitudes correlate with Dst as good as the convective electric field. ► Maximum magnetic field magnitude of a magnetic cloud is determinant in geomagnetic effectiveness.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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