“…The intrinsic flux rope properties can give early warning of the potential space weather consequences, but most importantly it provides critical information for constraining flux ropes in a variety of semiempirical and first-principle models describing the propagation and evolution of CMEs in the corona and heliosphere, such as ForeCAT and FIDO (Kay et al, 2013(Kay et al, , 2017, 3DCORE (Möstl et al, 2018), INFROS (Sarkar et al, 2020), Enlil (Odstrcil et al, 2004), EUropean Heliospheric FORecasting Information Asset (EUHFORIA; Pomoell and Poedts, 2018), and SUSANOO-CME (Shiota and Kataoka, 2016). Although first-principle models are so-far routinely run with only cone-model CMEs for space weather forecasting purposes, for example EUHFORIA is now actively tested with magnetized CMEs to give improved predictions and more realistic information on the effect of CME interactions (Scolini et al, 2019(Scolini et al, , 2020Verbeke et al, 2019). The intrinsic magnetic field structure of a CME flux rope can be estimated using indirect observational proxies that combine characteristics of structures in the solar atmosphere related to the erupting CME, such as filament details, flare ribbons, and sigmoids (e.g., Palmerio et al, 2017Palmerio et al, , 2018Gopalswamy et al, 2018, and references therein).…”