Long-term loss and re-formation of the outer radiation belt
2013
[1] The Earth's outer radiation belt is known to vary often and significantly on various time scales. In this study, we have used the data of various instruments onboard the THEMIS spacecraft to study long-term changes of the outer radiation belt electrons around the year 2009. We find that the entire outer belt became extremely weak for nearly a year and was practically lost a few times, each time lasting ~20 days up to ~2 months, before eventually re-forming. This was revealed at a wide energy range from several tens of keV to up to 719 keV, which was covered by the THEMIS spacecraft measurements. The loss of the outer belt was associated with extremely weak solar wind conditions, i.e., low interplanetary magnetic field magnitude and slow solar wind speed. In particular, this set greatly reduced magnetospheric convection and/or injections for a prolonged time interval, which led to a large expansion of the plasmasphere, even beyond geosynchronous altitude and thus invading the majority of the typical outer belt territory for the same prolonged time interval. Consequently, preexisting electrons inside the plasmasphere had enough time to be lost into the atmosphere gradually over a time scale of several days without being supplied with fresh electrons from the plasma sheet under the same reduced convection and/or injections. Plasmaspheric hiss waves with an amplitude of up to a few tens of pT persisted to exist during the gradual decay periods, implying that they are likely responsible for the continual loss of the electrons inside the plasmasphere. A complete re-formation of the outer belt to full intensity was then realized over an interval of a few months. During the re-formation process, the magnetospheric convection and/or injections increased, which led to a gradual increase of whistler chorus wave activity, contraction of the plasmasphere, and supply of the plasma sheet electrons at high L shells. This set first an outward increasing profile of the phase space density, which eventually developed into a profile with a peak at low L of ~5 over a time scale of 1–2 days. In this latter stage, a local acceleration at low L shells is found to be clearly needed although the radial diffusion process can contribute to some extent, in particular, for particles with a low first adiabatic invariant value.
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