Abstract

ABSTRACT In this paper, Forbush decreases (FDs) from 1997 to 2020 associated with coronal mass ejections from active and non-active regions are compared between themselves and to FDs caused by high-speed streams from coronal holes. The two types of sporadic FDs are also compared when corresponding solar wind (SW) disturbances contain, or do not contain, magnetic clouds (MCs) near Earth. Cosmic ray density and anisotropy variations, SW speed, interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) strength, and geomagnetic indices have been examined using statistical methods. The results reveal that these parameters are larger for FDs associated with active region (AR) ejections and have highly skewed distributions for both types of sporadic events. In the same ranges of SW parameters, FD magnitude is larger for flare-associated events; more efficient modulation occurs in FDs associated with AR ejections. Differences between FDs associated with AR and non-AR ejections are more pronounced when an MC is registered. For IMF strength and geomagnetic indices, differences between the distributions depend more upon MC presence or absence than on the type of solar source. Correlation of IMF strength and SW speed differs slightly between FDs caused by AR and non-AR ejections regardless of the presence or absence of an MC, akin to the partial correlation between FD magnitude and IMF strength. Difference between the speeds of disturbed and background SW is larger for FDs associated with AR ejections especially when an MC is registered; the interaction region of different-speed SW streams occurs more frequently in interplanetary disturbances induced by AR ejections.

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