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Energetic Energetic Particles in Particles in the Quiet the Quiet Corona Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2 , M. DeRosa 3 , S. Frewen 2 , & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory, UC Berkeley, 3 LMSAL Palo Alto
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Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Energetic Particles in Energetic Particles in the Quiet Coronathe Quiet Corona

A. MacKinnon1,2, M. DeRosa3, S. Frewen2, & H. Hudson2

1University of Glasgow, 2Space Sciences Laboratory, UC Berkeley, 3LMSAL Palo Alto

Page 2: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Possible particle sourcesPossible particle sources

• CRAND (Cosmic Ray Albedo Neutron Decay): Standard radiation-belt mechanism

• Metric type II/ Moreton shock acceleration: Proposed here, theory unclear

• SEP capture: Proposed here; known physics for terrestrial belts

• Microflares/nanoflares: Speculative

Page 3: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Does the solar corona Does the solar corona have a dipole field?have a dipole field?

• No, not really! The obvious dipolar structure apparent in eclipse pictures at solar minimum does not relate to a real object

• The solar-wind field is strongly dipolar, but at the same time highly non-potential

(a) SOHO composite at solarMinimum(b) Dipole model fit by S. Gibson

Conclusion: can be rather dipolar

Page 4: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Experimenting with a “real” fieldExperimenting with a “real” field

• Schrijver-DeRosa PFSS models provide a first estimate of global field structure for particle motions

• Within these fields, we follow particle motions in the adiabatic approximation

• This work does not apply directly to CME situations, except for relatively undisturbed parts of the corona

Page 5: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

How stable is PFSS at low order?How stable is PFSS at low order?

Page 6: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Gross consequences of driftsGross consequences of drifts● Curvature and gradient drift velocity:

● Here we explore potential fields, B = -∇, so VD ~ ∇B∇

● A particle's local drift velocity lies in the intersection of the local equipotential and 'isomagnetobar' surfaces.● Particles with 90 pitch angles, at field minima, drift across the field at constant B and , in the intersection of two such surfaces (cf. 'equatorially mirroring particles' in Earth's radiation belts)● Particles with arbitrary pitch angles drift within a region defined by B

min and B

max, and the values of at their mirror points.

Page 7: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

equipotential 'isomagnetobar'

A particle's instantaneous drift velocity will lie in the intersection of these two surfaces.All particles will drift towards z=0 in such localised fields.

Part of an idealised field, e.g. of a single active region. Surfaces generated using a single, sub-surface dipole for illustration.

solar surface plane

height

Page 8: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Example: PFSS, 30 Sept 2006Example: PFSS, 30 Sept 2006

Figures show contours of B in the plane of the photosphere (left) and in vertical cross-section at fixed latitude (right), from PFSS, for a small, weak active region on 30 September 2006. A particle first found in the corona, at the apex of the dotted contour in the right figure will drift and eventually meet the surface somewhere on the dotted contour (same B) in the left figure.

Page 9: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Example: PFSS, 30 Sept 2006Example: PFSS, 30 Sept 2006

Intersections in the solar surface of equipotentials (dashed contours) and isomagnetobars (solid contours) map onto locations in the corona. A particle of non-zero pitch angle bounces between mirror points and drifts laterally, moving towards a curve in the surface defined by its locus in B and .

Note: axes are not labelled in

degrees! Fig. is 200,000 by

100,000 km

Page 10: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Particle drifts in an active regionParticle drifts in an active region

This compares the distribution of |B| with the scalarpotential for a weak active region seen in the PFSSmaps for 2004/01/14 00:04, evaluated at 1.18 Rsun. The drift motions of trapped particles must be be perpendicular to the gradients of each quantity.

Page 11: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Analytical expressions for guiding center motions in a dipole field exist (e.g. Northrop, 1966; Schulz and Lanzerotti, 1974). These may become useful at high altitudes.

For non-relativistic protons of energy E (MeV):

Here F( depends on particle pitch angle; 0.67 < F( The long times over which particles must avoid pitch-angle scattering make solar scale radiation belts unlikely.

For a nucleus of atomic and mass numbers Z and A, energy mc2 on a field line of equatorial height r when the surface, equatorial field strength is B

0, the time to drift once round the Sun is:

Page 12: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

Solar Ring Current?• Using the expression above, the bounce averaged azimuthal drift velocity is

• Even particles in the tail of the thermal coronal population will drift. Including only protons above 3v

th, integrating over energy and pitch

angle and adopting r = 1.5RSun

, n=107 cm-3, T=2106 K we find:

j 10-12 A.m-2

locally modest but implying a total current of order 1 MA.• Any more fast particles (e.g. CRAND; low-level QS acceleration; Lorentz rather than Maxwell distribution) would enhance this.

Page 13: Energetic Particles in the Quiet Corona A. MacKinnon 1,2, M. DeRosa 3, S. Frewen 2, & H. Hudson 2 1 University of Glasgow, 2 Space Sciences Laboratory,

ConclusionsConclusions• We have studied particle transport in the

Schrijver-DeRosa PFSS models

• The solar corona can support partial radiation belts

• The same methodology can be used for PFSS realizations of active-region fields

• At present we do not think that solar radiation belts are important, but there are many interesting unexplored possibilities