SM31D-4239:
The Ring Current Response to Solar and Interplanetary Storm Drivers

Wednesday, 17 December 2014
Christopher Mouikis1, Lynn M Kistler1, Sam Bingham1, Elena A Kronberg2, Matina Gkioulidou3, Chia-Lin Huang4 and Charles J Farrugia1, (1)University of New Hampshire Main Campus, Durham, NH, United States, (2)The Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Garching, Germany, (3)JHU/APL, Laurel, MD, United States, (4)University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, United States
Abstract:
The ring current responds differently to the different solar and interplanetary storm drivers such as coronal mass injections, (CME’s), corotating interaction regions (CIR’s), high-speed streamers and other structures. The resulting changes in the ring current particle pressure, in turn, change the global magnetic field, controlling the transport of the radiation belts. To quantitatively determine the field changes during a storm throughout the magnetosphere, it is necessary to understand the transport, sources and losses of the particles that contribute to the ring current. Because the measured ring current energy spectra depend not only on local processes, but also on the history of the ions along their entire drift path, measurements of ring current energy spectra at two or more locations can be used to strongly constrain the time dependent magnetic and electric fields. In this study we use data predominantly from the Cluster and the Van Allen Probes, covering more than a full solar cycle (from 2001 to 2014). For the period 2001-2012, the Cluster CODIF and RAPID measurements of the inner magnetosphere are the primary data set used to monitor the storm time ring current variability. After 2012, the Cluster data set complements the data from the Van Allen Probes HOPE and RBSPICE instruments, providing additional measurements from different MLT and L shells. Selected storms from this periods, allow us to study the ring current dynamics and pressure changes, as a function of L shell, magnetic local time, and the type of interplanetary disturbances.