the importance of wave acceleration and loss for dynamic radiation belt models richard b. horne m....
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The Importance of Wave Acceleration and Loss for Dynamic Radiation Belt Models
Richard B. Horne
M. M. Lam, N. P. Meredith and S. A. Glauert, British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK
3rd European Space Weather Week
Brussels, 14 November 2006
CRRES ~1 MeV Electron Flux
• Rapid variations in radiation belt
– Damage spacecraft
– Hazard to astronauts
Object
• To develop a dynamic radiation belt model
• Use of dynamic models
– To specify periods of risk
– To analyse events
– To determine extreme events
– To specify conditions where little (no) data is available
Importance of Wave Processes
• Structure of ‘quiet-time’ radiation belt controlled by losses due to waves
– Lyons and Thorne [1973]
• Losses due to lightning (whistlers), ground based transmitters, hiss
– Abel and Thorne [1998a, b]
• Losses due to microbursts precipitation (chorus waves)
– Obrien et al. [2003]
• Losses due to EMIC waves
– Summers and Thorne [2005], Albert [2005]
• Flux increases during 2003 Halloween due to chorus wave acceleration
– Horne et al. Nature [2005], Shprits et al. [2006]
• Wave acceleration on global scale
– Varotsou et al. [2005], Horne et al. [2006]
Radiation Belt Model
• Solve the Fokker Planck equation in 1d
– 1st term is transport across B (for constant 1st +2nd invariants J1, J2)
– 2nd term is losses due to wave-particle interactions
• Focus only on losses due to whistler mode hiss
• Use BAS wave database and PADIE code to calculate losses
• Use data at GEO and calculate flux near L=3-4
– GPS satellites
– Galileo satellites
CRRES Data at L=6
• Note energy dependence in flux variations
• Outer boundary condition requires flux at different energies
Inward Transport
• Conservation of adiabatic invariants (J1, J2)
– electrons accelerated when transported inward
• At GEO - need observations at 0.05 – few MeV
Contribution of Wave-Particle Interactions: Which Waves?
Intensity of Whistler Mode Hiss
• Wave intensity increases with Kp• Changes in high density plasmapause region is critical for wave power• Note plume region on dayside• Latitude: 5o – 30o
Latitude Coverage of Hiss
• Hiss observed to 30o latitude
• Averaged over 06:00-21:00 MLT
• Include wave-particles interactions along magnetic field due to distribution of waves
Pitch Angle Diffusion – PADIE Results
Assume• Peak wave frequency at 550 Hz
and width of 200 Hz• Peak power in field aligned
direction with 20o spread• 10 harmonic resonances• Bounce –average to mirror point
• Electron loss to atmosphere when diffusion rates are high near the loss cone (~ 4 degrees at L=4)
• Losses increase for fpe/fce small – fpe/fce =2 purple– Fpe/fce = 18 red
E = 1 MeVL=4Fpe/fce = 2, 6, 10, 14, 18
Pitch Angle Diffusion Matrix for Hiss
Model – Satellite Comparison - 1 MeV
• Drive model by time series of Kp• Use flux at L=6 as outer boundary• Look up fpe/fce and wave power according to Kp• Scale diffusion matrix and obtain loss rates at all MLT• Solve Fokker-Planck eqn. and obtain flux
CRRES
Model
Radial diffusion only Radial diffusion and chorus waves
Horne et al. [2006]
Conclusions
• Model predicts MeV flux at L=3 – 4 from observations at L=6 using RD + wave losses
• Losses inside plasmapause near L~4 are major importance• Predictions better than empirical models• Flux L>4 underestimated – suggests local acceleration required
• Model improvements– Include wave acceleration outside plasmapause - chorus waves
• Varotsou et al. [2005]; Horne et al [2006]– Include losses due to other waves modes
• EMIC, chorus, whistlers, transmitters, magnetosonic waves
• Data requirements– Electron flux at 0.1 – few MeV at GEO– Galileo and GPS data for verification at L~4– Wave database with different wave modes
Timescale for Inward Transport
• If flux at outer boundary drops by a factor of 100 for 10 days
– Flux at L=4 responds after 2 days
• If flux drops for only 1 day
– Almost no response at L<4