SM32A-05
Extreme enhancements and depletions of relativistic electrons in Earth’s radiation belts

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 11:20
2018 (Moscone West)
Drew L Turner1, Seth G Claudepierre2, Thomas Paul O'Brien III2, Joseph F. Fennell1, J Bernard Blake1, Daniel N. Baker3, Allison N Jaynes4, Steven Morley5 and Reeves Geoffrey5, (1)The Aerospace Corp, Los Angeles, CA, United States, (2)Aerospace Corporation Santa Monica, Santa Monica, CA, United States, (3)University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States, (4)University of Colorado at Boulder, LASP, Boulder, CO, United States, (5)Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, United States
Abstract:
Earth’s electron radiation belts consist of toroidal zones in near-Earth space characterized by intense levels of relativistic electrons with distinct energy-dependent boundaries. It has been known for decades that the outer electron radiation belt is highly variable, with electron intensities varying by orders of magnitude on timescales ranging from minutes to years. Now, we are gaining much insight into the nature of this extreme variability thanks to the unprecedented number of observatories capable of measuring radiation belt electrons, the most recent of which is NASA’s Van Allen Probes mission. In this presentation, we analyze and review several of the most extreme events observed in Earth’s outer radiation belt. We begin with very sudden and strong enhancements of the outer radiation belt that can result in several orders of magnitude enhancements of electron intensities up to several MeV that sometimes occur in less than one day. We compare and contrast two of the most extreme cases of sudden and strong enhancements from the Van Allen Probes era, 08-09 October 2012 and 17-18 March 2015, and review evidence of the dominant acceleration mechanism in each event. Sudden enhancements of the radiation belts can also occur from injections by interplanetary shocks impacting the magnetosphere, such as occurred on 24 March 1991. We compare shock characteristics from previous injection events to those from the Van Allen Probes era to investigate why none of the interplanetary shocks since September 2012 have caused MeV electron injections into the slot region and inner radiation belt, which has surprisingly been devoid of measurable quantities of >~1 MeV electrons throughout the Van Allen Probes era. Our last topic concerns loss processes. We discuss drastic loss events, known as “flux dropouts”, and present evidence that these loss events can eliminate the vast majority of relativistic electrons in the outer radiation belt on time scales of only a few hours. We finish with cases of prolonged outer belt depletions, such as occurred throughout most of 2009 and in September 2014, and discuss how these can result from flux dropout events combined with a subsequent lack of any source of new relativistic electrons.