Abstract:
Ever since the dawn of astronomy, we and the Sun have not been celestial strangers
anymore, and it was soon realised that there is a close Sun-Earth connection that was
awaiting our acknowledgement. With that came several dedicated space and ground
based solar missions, and it was understood that Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) lies
at the heart of this Sun-Earth connection. After several decades of observing and
studying CMEs, our understanding of their behaviour have touched great heights.
But, inspite of the strident progress in this area, there are some challenges that have
left certain grey patches in our understanding of CMEs. Although we do have a good
understanding of the propagation of the CME in the outer corona and the heliosphere,
we are yet to have a clear understanding of the early evolutionary phase of the CMEs
in the inner corona region (< 3R⊙). This has been mainly due to limited observational
data in the inner corona, and projection effects occurring due to measurements made
on the plane of the sky. This thesis particularly aims at improving our understanding
on the above two aspects, and dedicates the results obtained to several existing and
upcoming solar missions that will be observing the inner corona.
As an attempt to remove projection effects and to understand the kinematics of CMEs
in the inner corona, the Graduated Cylindrical Shell (GCS) model is applied on the
stereoscopic observations of 59 CMEs from COR-1 and COR-2 on-board the twin
spacecraft Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO-A/B). This enabled a
two vantage point tracking of CMEs through a combined field of view of 1.5 - 14 R⊙.
We combined the 3D width evolution and acceleration profiles to report for the first
time an observational evidence in support of the conjecture that CME acceleration and
width expansion are just different manifestations of the same Lorentz force, and based
on this we report that statistically, the Lorentz force impact on the kinematics remains
dominant in a height range of 2.5 - 3 R⊙. We also show that combining latitude and position angle distributions to understand CME deflections, might be misleading. With
a statistical study on the distribution of projected widths of CMEs, we report for the
first time that slow (< 300 kms−1) and fast (> 500 kms−1) CMEs arising from different
source regions (i.e. active regions (ARs) and prominence eruptions (PEs)) follow
different power laws in their width distributions, thus indicat ing different physical
mechanisms of width expansion. We also study the coupling of the 3D kinematics
in the inner corona, to the kinematics in the outer corona, and we find that the
kinematics in the inner corona largely controls the later kinematics, and that this
coupling of kinematics is different for CMEs arising from ARs and PEs. We report
on several statistical correlations between different kinematic parameters in the inner
and outer corona, and we present empirical relations that can be used in extrapolating
outer coronal parameters from inner coronal parameters. But, owing to the limited
field of view of COR-1, the full main acceleration phase of the CME could not be
captured, because a part of that crucial phase was already over by the time the CME
came in the COR-1 field of view. Further, due to 2 vantage point tracking, there are
degeneracy in certain parameters for some CME orientations.
Motivated by the above results and the shortcomings that came along, we extended the
application of the GCS model to the inner coronal observations from the ground–based
coronagraph K–Cor of the Mauna Loa Solar Observatory (MLSO) along with the pair
of observations from STEREO as earlier. This Extended - GCS (EGCS) model enabled
for the first time 3D tracking of CMEs, uniquely in white light observations from heights
as low as 1.1 R⊙. Apart from being able to capture the early acceleration phase of the
CMEs in white light observations, we also studied the evolution of the true volume of
the CME with height. For the first time, we report a a power law dependence of the
CME volume with distance from the Sun. We further find the volume of ellipsoidal
leading front and the conical legs follow different power laws, thus indicating differential
volume expansion through a CME. The study also reveals two distinct power laws for
the total volume evolution of CMEs in the inner and outer corona, thus suggesting
different expansion mechanisms at these different heights. Also, this differential volume
expansion of CMEs further motivated me in studying the velocity dispersion inside
CMEs in the inner corona, as that will have profound significance on the validity of
the assumption of self-similar expansion of CME evolution.
A multi-wavelength study is also presented here on a CME that occurred on January 26
2014. In this work, the significance of combining radio observations with white-light
and extreme ultraviolet observations is presented in better understanding the shock
driving phenomenon of CMEs that are responsible for producing type-II radio bursts.
It was with the help of the radio spectral and imaging observations, that it became
possible to pin point that it was the flank of the CME than the nose, that hosted the
type-II burst location, and that too, the Southern flank.
Encapsulating in a nutshell, this thesis will largely aid in filling in some of the crucial
gaps and connect the missing links (as mentioned earlier) towards a holistic understanding
of CME kinematics in inner corona, and the way the kinematics gets coupled
at the higher heights. The different chapters besides highlighting the sole potential of
white-light observations in arriving at the above scientific goals, will also provide rich
inputs in observational plannings of the existing and upcoming solar missions that will
observe the inner corona. It will also provide crucial constraints to the models that
tries to emulate the ejection and propagation of CMEs at the lower and higher heights.