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Solar cosmic ray micro-events

1973 
To study small discrete solar particle events, it has proven useful to define a special class such that the proton flux at energies greater than 20 MeV exceed 0.0001 protons/sq cm-sec-sr-MeV. These increases are termed microevents. An arbitrary upper limit is placed at 2 X 0.02 protons/sq cm-sec-sr-MeV. By demanding a measurable flux above 20 MeV, a better separation from corotating events is achieved and onset times can in general be determined more precisely. Over an observing period extending from May 1967 through December 1971, approximately 105 events were observed. There are several different sources of these small events. Some are produced by moderate to large solar flares near the east limb or by solar flares on the nonvisible disk of the sun. Others are produced by generally minor solar activity: typically in 1N flare, a group of type 3 radio bursts and a well defined X-ray burst. A significant number of this latter type are accompanied by type 2 radio emission. A small sample of the micro-events can be classified as scatter-free events. For these the distance traveled by the particles before their initial detection at earth is on the order of 1.5 AU and observed rise and decay times are much less than normal. Examples of these general types of micro-events and their solar association are discussed.
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