“…Therefore interplanetary drivers of magnetic storms are the following disturbed types of solar wind: (1) CIR (Corotating Interaction Regions) formed in compress region between slow and high‐speed streams of solar wind, (2) ICME (interplanetary coronal mass ejections including magnetic clouds and less powerful disturbance ‐ Ejecta), and (3) Sheath formed in compress region between fast ICME and slower stream of solar wind (see reviews and recent papers, for instance, by Tsurutani and Gonzalez [1997], Gonzalez et al [1999], Yermolaev and Yermolaev [2006], Zhang et al [2007], Turner et al [2009], Yermolaev et al [2010b, 2011, 2012], Nikolaeva et al [2011], Gonzalez et al [2011], and Guo et al [2011], and references therein). One of recent important experimental results is evidence that features of magnetic storm depend on type of the interplanetary driver [ Borovsky and Denton , 2006; Denton et al , 2006; Huttunen et al , 2006; Pulkkinen et al , 2007a; Plotnikov and Barkova , 2007; Longden et al , 2008; Turner et al , 2009; Yermolaev et al , 2010b, 2012; Guo et al , 2011; Buzulukova et al , 2012; Liemohn and Katus , 2012]. These facts indicate that mechanisms of magnetic storm generation (or modes of these mechanisms) can differ depending on the driver.…”