Perturbations in the solar atmosphere are the major origins of geomagnetic storms. Reconfiguration of magnetic fields in the solar atmosphere causes uplift of materials from the solar chromosphere into the corona. These relatively cool, but dense materials are suspended against gravity at greater heights by magnetic tension in the dips of the field lines, appearing by absorption against the hotter and brighter background (Carlyle, 2016). These materials could be elongated in structures, to the order of thousands of kilometers in length to form filaments, which could, in turn erupt from the solar coronal surface as Coronal Mass Ejection (CME). CMEs, particularly the Earth-directed ones are the sources of space weather events (e.g., geomagnetic storms) on the Earth. High Speed Streams (HSSs) from the Sun's coronal holes are the sources of the Corotating Interaction Regions (CIRs) which also known to cause geomagnetic storms (Burlaga & Lepping, 1977;Gosling, 1993). The occurrences of geomagnetic storms do influence the electrodynamics of