Abstract. Coronal Mass ejections (CMEs) are enormous eruptions of magnetized plasma expelled from the Sun into the interplanetary space, over the course of hours to days. They can create major disturbances in the interplanetary medium and trigger severe magnetic storms when they collide with the Earth's magnetosphere. It is important to know their real speed, propagation direction and 3-D configuration in order to accurately predict their arrival time at the Earth. Using data from the SECCHI coronagraphs onboard the STEREO mission, which was launched in October 2006, we can infer the propagation direction and the 3-D structure of such events. In this review, we first describe different techniques that were used to model the 3-D configuration of CMEs in the coronagraph field of view (up to 15 R ).Correspondence to: M. Mierla (mmierla@gmail.com) Then, we apply these techniques to different CMEs observed by various coronagraphs. A comparison of results obtained from the application of different reconstruction algorithms is presented and discussed.
We present a hybrid combination of forward and inverse reconstruction methods using multiple observations of a coronal mass ejection (CME) to derive the threedimensional (3D) "true" height -time plots for individual CME components. We apply this hybrid method to the components of the 31 December 2007 CME. This CME, observed clearly in both the STEREO A and STEREO B COR2 white-light coronagraphs, evolves asymmetrically across the 15-solar-radius field of view within a span of three hours. The method has two reconstruction steps. We fit a boundary envelope for the potential 3D CME shape using a flux-rope-type model oriented to best match the observations. Using this forward model as a constraining envelope, we then run an inverse reconstruction, solving for the simplest underlying 3D electron density distribution that can, when rendered, reproduce the observed coronagraph data frames. We produce plots for each segment to establish the 3D or "true" height -time plots for each center of mass as well as for the bulk CME motion, and we use these plots along with our derived density profiles to estimate the CME's asymmetric expansion rate.
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