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11 - Energization of trapped particles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2013

Janet Green
Affiliation:
NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center
Carolus J. Schrijver
Affiliation:
Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory, Lockheed Martin
George L. Siscoe
Affiliation:
Boston University
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Summary

Heliophysical particles: universal processes and problems

At the time the very first satellites were launched half a century ago, the space environment was portrayed by mainstream media as the science fiction home where Flash Gordon fought evil aliens. The very real threat of Earth's radiation belts was not even imagined in either the fantasy or science worlds so no consideration was given to how the very energetic particles of the belts, traveling near the speed of light and capable of penetrating solid material, might affect instrumentation. Yet it was the diminished performance of the Geiger counter designed by James Van Allen (Van Allen et al., 1958; see also Section 3.1), that led to the eventual discovery of the belts. Van Allen speculated that the unusually low flux measurements returned by his experiment were actually a sign that the instrument had saturated, overwhelmed by a previously unknown and very large population of energetic particles.

The conjecture was confirmed by the dozens of satellites launched to probe Earth's magnetosphere providing a qualitative depiction and understanding of the radiation belts. (For a list of satellites with radiation belt particle data visit the Virtual Radiation Belt Observatory on line.) The belts consist of protons and electrons trapped in Earth's magnetic field forming torus-shaped regions extending from ˜1.5 to ˜10 Earth radii (RE) (see Fig. 11.1). The protons form only a single belt. The electrons form two belts separated at ˜2.5 RE by a minimum flux region known as the slot (Lyons and Thorne, 1973).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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