Investigating the Origins of Two Extreme Solar Particle Events: Proton Source Profile and Associated Electromagnetic Emissions
Roksoon Kim; Kyung-Suk Cho; Silja Pohjolainen; Alexander Mishev; Victor J. Pizzo; Dale E. Gary; Mike J. Reiner; Jeongwoo Lee; Leonid V. Didkovsky; Andreas Klassen; Ilya Usoskin; Eino Valtonen; Leon Kocharov; Marian Karlicky; Rami Vainio; Timo Laitinen
Investigating the Origins of Two Extreme Solar Particle Events: Proton Source Profile and Associated Electromagnetic Emissions
Roksoon Kim
Kyung-Suk Cho
Silja Pohjolainen
Alexander Mishev
Victor J. Pizzo
Dale E. Gary
Mike J. Reiner
Jeongwoo Lee
Leonid V. Didkovsky
Andreas Klassen
Ilya Usoskin
Eino Valtonen
Leon Kocharov
Marian Karlicky
Rami Vainio
Timo Laitinen
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042716939
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042716939
Tiivistelmä
We analyze the high-energy particle emission from the Sun in two extreme solar particle events. in which protons are accelerated to relativistic energies and can cause a significant signal even in the ground-based particle detectors. Analysis of a relativistic proton event is based on modeling of the particle transport and interaction, from a near-Sun source through the solar wind and the Earth's magnetosphere and atmosphere to a detector on the ground. This allows us to deduce the time profile of the proton source at the Sun and compare it with observed electromagnetic emissions. The 1998 May 2 event is associated with a. flare and a coronal mass ejection (CME), which were well observed by the Nancay Radioheliograph, thus. the images of the. radio sources are available. For the 2003 November 2 event, the low corona images of the CME liftoff obtained at the Mauna Loa Solar Observatory. are available. Those complementary data sets are analyzed jointly with the broadband dynamic radio spectra, EUV images, and other data available for both events. We find a common scenario for both eruptions, including the flare's dual impulsive phase, the CME-launch-associated decimetric-continuum burst, and the late, low-frequency type III radio bursts at the time of the relativistic proton injection into the interplanetary medium. The analysis supports the idea that the two considered events start with emission of relativistic protons previously accelerated during the flare and CME launch, then trapped in large-scale magnetic loops and later released by the expanding CME.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]