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The Inversion of the Real Kinematic Properties of Coronal Mass Ejections by Forward Modeling
The kinematic properties of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) suffer from the
projection effects, and it is expected that the real velocity should be larger
and the real angular width should be smaller than the apparent values. Several
attempts have been tried to correct the projection effects, which however led
to a too large average velocity probably due to the biased choice of the CME
events. In order to estimate the overall influence of the projection effects on
the kinematic properties of the CMEs, we perform a forward modeling of the real
distributions of the CME properties, such as the velocity, the angular width,
and the latitude, by requiring their projected distributions to best match the
observations. Such a matching is conducted by Monte Carlo simulations.
According to the derived real distributions, it is found that (1) the average
real velocity of all non-full-halo CMEs is about 514 km s, and the
average real angular width is about 33, in contrast to the
corresponding apparent values of 418 km s and 42.7 in
observations; (2) For the CMEs with the angular width in the range of
, the average real velocity is 510 km s and the
average real angular width is 43.4, in contrast to the corresponding
apparent values of 392 km s and 52 in observations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Res. Astron. Astrophys. (RAA
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