Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 597, Issue 2, Pages L169-L172Publisher
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/379847
Keywords
diffusion; magnetic fields; Sun : particle emission; turbulence
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The transport of energetic particles perpendicular to the mean magnetic field in space plasmas has long been viewed as a diffusive process. However, there is an apparent conflict between recent observations of solar energetic particles (SEPs): (1) Impulsive solar flares can exhibit dropouts in which the SEP intensity near Earth repeatedly disappears and reappears, indicating a filamentary distribution of SEPs and little diffusion across these boundaries. (2) Observations by the IMP-8 and Ulysses spacecraft, while they were on opposite sides of the Sun, showed similar time-intensity profiles for many SEP events, indicating a rapid lateral diffusion of particles throughout the inner solar system within a few days. We explain these seemingly contradictory observations using a theoretical model, supported by computer simulations, in which many particles are temporarily trapped within topological structures in statistically homogeneous magnetic turbulence and ultimately escape to diffuse at a much faster rate.
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