Quantitative Evaluation of Radial Diffusion and Local Acceleration Processes During GEM Challenge Events
Abstract
We simulate the radiation belt electron flux enhancements during selected Geospace Environment Modeling (GEM) challenge events to quantitatively compare the major processes involved in relativistic electron acceleration under different conditions. Van Allen Probes observed significant electron flux enhancement during both the storm time of 17–18 March 2013 and non–storm time of 19–20 September 2013, but the distributions of plasma waves and energetic electrons for the two events were dramatically different. During 17–18 March 2013, the SYM‐H minimum reached −130 nT, intense chorus waves (peak Bw ~140 pT) occurred at 3.5 L L SYM‐H remained higher than −30 nT, modestly intense chorus waves (peak Bw ~80 pT) occurred at L > 5.5, and electron fluxes at energies up to 3 MeV increased by a factor of ~5 at L > 5.5. The two electron flux enhancement events were simulated using the available wave distribution and diffusion coefficients from the GEM focus group Quantitative Assessment of Radiation Belt Modeling. By comparing the individual roles of local electron heating and radial transport, our simulation indicates that resonant interaction with chorus waves is the dominant process that accounts for the electron flux enhancement during the storm time event particularly near the flux peak locations, while radial diffusion by ultralow‐frequency waves plays a dominant role in the enhancement during the non–storm time event. Incorporation of both processes reasonably reproduces the observed location and magnitude of electron flux enhancement.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Mar 01, 2018
- Source ID
- 10.1002/2017ja025114
Entities
People
- Bernard Blake
- Craig Kletzing
- Daniel N. Baker
- Geoffrey D Reeves
- George G. Hospodarsky
- Harlan Spence
- Jacob Bortnik
- Joseph Fennell
- L. G. Ozeke
- Mark Engebretson
- Qianli Ma
- Richard Thorne
- Seth G Claudepierre
- Wen Li
- William S. Kurth
- Xiangning Chu
Organizations
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- Augsburg University
- Boston University
- Los Alamos National Laboratory
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- National Science Foundation
- The Aerospace Corporation
- University of Alberta
- University of Iowa
- University of New Hampshire