Back to Search Start Over

Seed Populations for Large Solar Particle Events Of Cycle 23

Authors :
M. I. Desai
G. M. Mason
R. E. Gold
S. M. Krimigis
C. M. S. Cohen
R. A. Mewaldt
J. R. Dwyer
J. E. Mazur
Gang Li
Qiang Hu
Olga Verkhoglyadova
Gary P. Zank
R. P. Lin
J. Luhmann
Li, G.
Hu, Q.
Verkhoglyadova, O.
Zank, G. P.
Lin, R. P.
Luhmann, J.
Source :
AIP Conference Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
AIP, 2008.

Abstract

Using high-resolution mass spectrometers on board the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE), we surveyed the event-averaged ~0.1-60 MeV/nuc heavy ion elemental composition in 64 large solar energetic particle (LSEP) events of cycle 23. Our results show the following: (1) The rare isotope ^3He is greatly enhanced over the corona or the solar wind values in 46% of the events. (2) The Fe/O ratio decreases with increasing energy up to ~10 MeV/nuc in ~92% of the events and up to ~60 MeV/nuc in ~64% of the events. (3) Heavy ion abundances from C-Fe exhibit systematic M/g-dependent enhancements that are remarkably similar to those seen in ^3He-rich SEP events and CME-driven interplanetary (IP) shock events. Taken together, these results confirm the role of shocks in energizing particles up to ~60 MeV/nuc in the majority of large SEP events of cycle 23, but also show that the seed population is not dominated by ions originating from the ambient corona or the thermal solar wind, as previously believed. Rather, it appears that the source material for CME-associated large SEP events originates predominantly from a suprathermal population with a heavy ion enrichment pattern that is organized according to the ion's mass-per-charge ratio. These new results indicate that current LSEP models must include the routine production of this dynamic suprathermal seed population as a critical pre-cursor to the CME shock acceleration process.

Details

ISSN :
0094243X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIP Conference Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e37fcf1cb0aaf6b6300fce22cdf7c6e2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2982434