2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11430-015-0252-6
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New method for determining central axial orientation of flux rope embedded within current sheet using multipoint measurements

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Historically, most studies (e.g., Jasinski et al, ; Martin et al, ; Russell & Elphic, ; Wei et al, ; Vignes et al, ) rely on minimum variance analysis (MVA) (Sonnerup & Cahill Jr, ) to rotate the magnetic field into a flux rope‐aligned cylindrical coordinate system. Some studies have circumvented MVA by explicitly including the orientation angles as free parameters in the mode (e.g., Hidalgo et al, ) or using geometrical assumptions (e.g., Li et al, ). However, MVA remains the most convenient method for automatic reorientation of the coordinate systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, most studies (e.g., Jasinski et al, ; Martin et al, ; Russell & Elphic, ; Wei et al, ; Vignes et al, ) rely on minimum variance analysis (MVA) (Sonnerup & Cahill Jr, ) to rotate the magnetic field into a flux rope‐aligned cylindrical coordinate system. Some studies have circumvented MVA by explicitly including the orientation angles as free parameters in the mode (e.g., Hidalgo et al, ) or using geometrical assumptions (e.g., Li et al, ). However, MVA remains the most convenient method for automatic reorientation of the coordinate systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%