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Dynamic Responses of the Earth's Radiation Belts during Periods of Solar Wind Dynamic Pressure Pulse Based on Normalized Superposed Epoch Analysis

Authors :
Pingbing Zuo
Yuri Shprits
Xudong Gu
Binbin Ni
Chen Zhou
Zhengyu Zhao
Zhang Xianguo
Zheng Xiang
2.8 Magnetospheric Physics, 2.0 Geophysics, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Using the electron flux measurements obtained from five satellites (GOES-15 and POES 15, 16, 18, and 19), we investigate the flux variations of radiation belt electrons during forty solar wind dynamic pressure pulses identified between September 2012 and December 2014. By utilizing the mean duration of the pressure pulses as the epoch timeline and stretching or compressing the time phases of individual events to normalize the duration by means of linear interpolation, we have performed normalized superposed epoch analysis to evaluate the dynamic responses of radiation belt energetic electrons corresponding to various groups of solar wind and magnetospheric conditions in association with solar wind dynamic pressure pulses. Our results indicate that by adopting the timeline normalization we can reproduce the typical response of the electron radiation belts to pressure pulses. Radiation belt electron fluxes exhibit large depletions right after the Pdyn peak during the periods of northward IMF Bz and are more likely to occur during the Pdyn pulse under southward IMF Bz conditions. For the pulse events with large negative values of (Dst)min, radiation belt electrons respond in a manner similar to those with southward IMF Bz, and the corresponding post-pulse recovery can extend to L ~ 3 and exceed the pre-pulse flux levels. Triggered by the solar wind pressure enhancements, deeper earthward magnetopause erosion provides favorable conditions for the prompt electron flux dropouts that extend down to L ~ 5, and the pressure pulses with longer duration tend to produce quicker and stronger electron flux decay. In addition, the events with high electron fluxes before the Pdyn pulse tend to experience more severe electron flux dropouts during the course of the pulse, while the largest rate of electron flux increase before and after the pulse occurs under the pre-conditioned low electron fluxes. These new results help us understand how electron fluxes respond to solar wind dynamic pressure pulses and how these responses depend on the solar wind and geomagnetic conditions and on the preconditions in the electron radiation belts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....593df1d5b5d6fdf5195883240b26224a