Active Precipitation of Radiation Belt Electrons Using Rocket Exhaust Driven Amplification (REDA) of Man‐Made Whistlers
Autor: | P. A. Bernhardt, M. Hua, J. Bortnik, Q. Ma, P. T. Verronen, M. P. McCarthy, D. L. Hampton, M. Golkowski, M. B. Cohen, D. K. Richardson, A. D. Howarth, H. G. James, N. P. Meredith |
---|---|
Přispěvatelé: | Ilmatieteen laitos, Finnish Meteorological Institute |
Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
active space experiments
ionosphere elektronit particle radiation Atmospheric Sciences avaruustutkimus atmosphere (earth) simulointi wave particle interactions space research aurinkotuuli hiukkassäteily ilmakehä electrons amplified whistler wave magnetosfääri säteily simulation satellites (technical object) radiation parametric amplifier Geophysics solar wind satelliitit Space and Planetary Science magnetosphere ionosfäri Astronomical and Space Sciences |
Zdroj: | Journal of geophysical research. Space physics, vol 127, iss 6 |
ISSN: | 2169-9402 2169-9380 |
DOI: | 10.1029/2022ja030358 |
Popis: | Ground-based very low frequency (VLF) transmitters located around the world generate signals that leak through the bottom side of the ionosphere in the form of whistler mode waves. Wave and particle measurements on satellites have observed that these man-made VLF waves can be strong enough to scatter trapped energetic electrons into low pitch angle orbits, causing loss by absorption in the lower atmosphere. This precipitation loss process is greatly enhanced by intentional amplification of the whistler waves using a newly discovered process called rocket exhaust driven amplification (REDA). Satellite measurements of REDA have shown between 30 and 50 dB intensification of VLF waves in space using a 60 s burn of the 150 g/s thruster on the Cygnus satellite that services the International Space Station. This controlled amplification process is adequate to deplete the energetic particle population on the affected field lines in a few minutes rather than the multi-day period it would take naturally. Numerical simulations of the pitch angle diffusion for radiation belt particles use the UCLA quasi-linear Fokker Planck model to assess the impact of REDA on radiation belt remediation of newly injected energetic electrons. The simulated precipitation fluxes of energetic electrons are applied to models of D-region electron density and bremsstrahlung X-rays for predictions of the modified environment that can be observed with satellite and ground-based sensors. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |