Long-term variations of quasi-trapped and trapped electrons in the inner radiation belt observed by DEMETER and SAMPEX
Abstract
Electrons in the Earth's radiation belts can be categorized into three populations: precipitating, quasi-trapped and trapped. We use data from the DEMETER and SAMPEX missions and from ground-based neutron monitors (NM) and sunspot observations to investigate the long-term variation of quasi-trapped and trapped sub-MeV electrons on different L shells in the inner belt. DEMETER and SAMPEX measurements span over 17 years and show that at L ≤ 1.14 the electron flux is anti-correlated with sunspot number, but proportional to the cosmic ray intensity represented by NM count rates, which suggests that electrons at the inner edge of the inner belt are produced by Cosmic Ray Albedo Neutron Decay (CRAND). The solar cycle variation of cosmic rays increased the electron flux at L ≤ 1.14 by a factor of two from solar maximum at 2001 to solar minimum at 2009. At L 1.2, both quasi-trapped and trapped electrons are enhanced during geomagnetic storms and decay to a background level during extended quiet times. At L>2, quasi-trapped electrons resemble trapped electrons, with correlation coefficients as high as 0.97, indicating that pitch angle scattering is the dominant process in this region.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.