Space Weather Effects in the Earth’s Radiation Belts

被引:0
作者
D. N. Baker
P. J. Erickson
J. F. Fennell
J. C. Foster
A. N. Jaynes
P. T. Verronen
机构
[1] University of Colorado at Boulder,Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
[2] Haystack Observatory,Massachusetts Institute of Technology
[3] Aerospace Corp.,undefined
[4] Space Sciences Laboratory,undefined
[5] Finnish Meteorological Institute,undefined
来源
Space Science Reviews | 2018年 / 214卷
关键词
Radiation belts; Space weather; Spacecraft anomalies; Particle acceleration; Magnetospheric dynamics; Wave–particle interactions;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
The first major scientific discovery of the Space Age was that the Earth is enshrouded in toroids, or belts, of very high-energy magnetically trapped charged particles. Early observations of the radiation environment clearly indicated that the Van Allen belts could be delineated into an inner zone dominated by high-energy protons and an outer zone dominated by high-energy electrons. The energy distribution, spatial extent and particle species makeup of the Van Allen belts has been subsequently explored by several space missions. Recent observations by the NASA dual-spacecraft Van Allen Probes mission have revealed many novel properties of the radiation belts, especially for electrons at highly relativistic and ultra-relativistic kinetic energies. In this review we summarize the space weather impacts of the radiation belts. We demonstrate that many remarkable features of energetic particle changes are driven by strong solar and solar wind forcings. Recent comprehensive data show broadly and in many ways how high energy particles are accelerated, transported, and lost in the magnetosphere due to interplanetary shock wave interactions, coronal mass ejection impacts, and high-speed solar wind streams. We also discuss how radiation belt particles are intimately tied to other parts of the geospace system through atmosphere, ionosphere, and plasmasphere coupling. The new data have in many ways rewritten the textbooks about the radiation belts as a key space weather threat to human technological systems.
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