4.5 Review

Energy Spectra, Composition, and Other Properties of Ground-Level Events During Solar Cycle 23

Journal

SPACE SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 171, Issue 1-4, Pages 97-120

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11214-012-9884-2

Keywords

Sun: particle emission; Sun: coronal mass ejections (CMEs); Acceleration of particles; Solar energetic particle acceleration; Sun: composition; Ionic charge states

Funding

  1. NASA at Caltech [NNX8AI11G, NNX06AC21G]
  2. UC Berkeley under NASA [SA2715-26309, NAS5-03131]

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We report spacecraft measurements of the energy spectra of solar protons and other solar energetic particle properties during the 16 Ground Level Events (GLEs) of Solar Cycle 23. The measurements were made by eight instruments on the ACE, GOES, SAMPEX, and STEREO spacecraft and extend from similar to 0.1 to similar to 500-700 MeV. All of the proton spectra exhibit spectral breaks at energies ranging from similar to 2 to similar to 46 MeV and all are well fit by a double power-law shape. A comparison of GLE events with a larger sample of other solar energetic particle (SEP) events shows that the typical spectral indices are harder in GLE events, with a mean slope of -3.18 at > 40 MeV/nuc. In the energy range 45 to 80 MeV/nucleon about similar to 50 % of GLE events have properties in common with impulsive He-3-rich SEP events, including enrichments in Ne/O, Fe/O, Ne-22/Ne-20, and elevated mean charge states of Fe. These He-3-rich events contribute to the seed population accelerated by CME-driven shocks. An analysis is presented of whether highly-ionized Fe ions observed in five events could be due to electron stripping during shock acceleration in the low corona. Making use of stripping calculations by others and a coronal density model, we can account for events with mean Fe charge states of aOE (c) Q (Fe)> a parts per thousand+20 if the acceleration starts at similar to 1.24-1.6 solar radii, consistent with recent comparisons of CME trajectories and type-II radio bursts. In addition, we suggest that gradual stripping of remnant ions from earlier large SEP events may also contribute a highly-ionized suprathermal seed population. We also discuss how observed SEP spectral slopes relate to the energetics of particle acceleration in GLE and other large SEP events.

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