Solar flare particle propagation--comparison of a new analytic solution with spacecraft measurements


Autoria(s): Lupton, John Edward
Data(s)

1972

Resumo

<p>A new analytic solution has been obtained to the complete Fokker-Planck equation for solar flare particle propagation including the effects of convection, energy-change, corotation, and diffusion with ĸ<sub>r</sub> = constant and ĸ<sub>Ɵ</sub> ∝ r<sup>2</sup>. It is assumed that the particles are injected impulsively at a single point in space, and that a boundary exists beyond which the particles are free to escape. Several solar flare particle events have been observed with the Caltech Solar and Galactic Cosmic Ray Experiment aboard OGO-6. Detailed comparisons of the predictions of the new solution with these observations of 1-70 MeV protons show that the model adequately describes both the rise and decay times, indicating that ĸ<sub>r</sub> = constant is a better description of conditions inside 1 AU than is ĸ<sub>r</sub> ∝ r. With an outer boundary at 2.7 AU, a solar wind velocity of 400 km/sec, and a radial diffusion coefficient ĸ<sub>r</sub> ≈ 2-8 x 10<sup>20</sup> cm<sup>2</sup>/sec, the model gives reasonable fits to the time-profile of 1-10 MeV protons from "classical" flare-associated events. It is not necessary to invoke a scatter-free region near the sun in order to reproduce the fast rise times observed for directly-connected events. The new solution also yields a time-evolution for the vector anisotropy which agrees well with previously reported observations.</p> <p>In addition, the new solution predicts that, during the decay phase, a typical convex spectral feature initially at energy T<sub>o</sub> will move to lower energies at an exponential rate given by T<sub>KINK</sub> = T<sub>o</sub>exp(-t/Ƭ<sub>KINK</sub>). Assuming adiabatic deceleration and a boundary at 2.7 AU, the solution yields Ƭ<sub>KINK</sub> ≈ 100h, which is faster than the measured ~200h time constant and slower than the adiabatic rate of ~78h at 1 AU. Two possible explanations are that the boundary is at ~5 AU or that some other energy-change process is operative.</p>

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9707/1/Lupton_je_1972.pdf

Lupton, John Edward (1972) Solar flare particle propagation--comparison of a new analytic solution with spacecraft measurements. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05092016-095858999 <http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05092016-095858999>

Relação

http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05092016-095858999

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9707/

Tipo

Thesis

NonPeerReviewed