4.5 Article

Global storm time depletion of the outer electron belt

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS
Volume 120, Issue 4, Pages 2543-2556

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014JA020645

Keywords

radiation belt; dropout; geomagnetic storms; magnetopause loss; ring current; radial transport

Funding

  1. NSF [AGS1059736, AD-44173]
  2. NASA [NNX14AH77G, sNNX11AO74G, NAS5-01072, NJIT 999640-I]
  3. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [1059736] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. NASA [683624, NNX14AH77G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The outer radiation belt consists of relativistic (>0.5MeV) electrons trapped on closed trajectories around Earth where the magnetic field is nearly dipolar. During increased geomagnetic activity, electron intensities in the belt can vary by orders of magnitude at different spatial and temporal scales. The main phase of geomagnetic storms often produces deep depletions of electron intensities over broad regions of the outer belt. Previous studies identified three possible processes that can contribute to the main-phase depletions: adiabatic inflation of electron drift orbits caused by the ring current growth, electron loss into the atmosphere, and electron escape through the magnetopause boundary. In this paper we investigate the relative importance of the adiabatic effect and magnetopause loss to the rapid depletion of the outer belt observed at the Van Allen Probes spacecraft during the main phase of 17 March 2013 storm. The intensities of >1MeV electrons were depleted by more than an order of magnitude over the entire radial extent of the belt in less than 6h after the sudden storm commencement. For the analysis we used three-dimensional test particle simulations of global evolution of the outer belt in the Tsyganenko-Sitnov (TS07D) magnetic field model with an inductive electric field. Comparison of the simulation results with electron measurements from the Magnetic Electron Ion Spectrometer experiment shows that magnetopause loss accounts for most of the observed depletion at L>5, while at lower L shells the depletion is adiabatic. Both magnetopause loss and the adiabatic effect are controlled by the change in global configuration of the magnetic field due to storm time development of the ring current; a simulation of electron evolution without a ring current produces a much weaker depletion.

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