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Radiation Belts St. Petersburg (RBSPb) Meeting:

Radiation Belts St. Petersburg (RBSPb) Meeting:. List of Interesting Storms and Events Drew L. Turner and Mike Hartinger. Mini-GEM: Dec. 2010. RBSPb 2010. 18 researchers (incl. students), representing institutions from USA, Russia, Japan, and EU, met in St. Petersburg, Russia in late July

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Radiation Belts St. Petersburg (RBSPb) Meeting:

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  1. Radiation Belts St. Petersburg (RBSPb) Meeting: List of Interesting Storms and Events Drew L. Turner and Mike Hartinger Mini-GEM: Dec. 2010

  2. RBSPb 2010 • 18 researchers (incl. students), representing institutions from USA, Russia, Japan, and EU, met in St. Petersburg, Russia in late July • Workshop website: http://www.i-mp.org/conference/i-mp_2010/ • Workshop format, open-discussion talks covering: • ULF waves • Whistler-mode chorus • EMIC waves • Effects of the plasmasphere • Observational studies • Data assimilation • Instrumentation and upcoming missions • Tutorial talk by Mike Schulz on the limiting energy spectrum of a saturated radiation belt • At the end of the workshop, there was a brainstorming session on collaborative projects…

  3. Events List • Radiation belt events with interesting, clear, and/or intriguing characteristics, e.g.: • Storm-time dynamics • Non-storm enhancements • Sudden dropout/loss events • A database of these events could (or “should”?) be generated • Database should include details for each event: • General information and data (i.e. fluxes, solar wind, etc.), • What has been studied previously, include any publications and their conclusions • What is being studied currently • Recommendations for future study • This should prove to be a useful reference tool for radiation belt researchers

  4. Examples: OMNI2 Bz V Pdyn Kp Dst June 1995: • 1 of 2 non/weak-storm enhancement event • Exhibits a very sudden enhancement of radiation belt electrons • No publications on these AE 170 166 172 174 168 176 Thanks to CDAWeb and LANL for online data access; also GPS data courtesy of R. Friedel, T. Cayton, and S. Bourdarie

  5. Examples: OMNI2 Bz December 2000: • 2nd non/weak-storm enhancement event • Unlike 1st event, this one exhibits a slower build up of energetic electrons V Pdyn Kp Dst AE 342 338 344 346 340 348 Thanks to CDAWeb and LANL for online data access; also GPS data courtesy of R. Friedel, T. Cayton, and S. Bourdarie

  6. Examples: February 2009: • Small storm with typical main-phase dropout and strong enhancement • Modeling analysis published in JGR [Tu et al., 2010] • Data also available from 1st BARREL balloon test flight • All this information (i.e. data, plots, references, and conclusions) for each event could be stored in one place!

  7. Event Database - Goals • Select several events that should be studied, are currently being studied, or have already been studied to improve our understanding of radiation belt dynamics • Incorporate these events into a database that is accessible to the radiation belt research community • Facilitate collaboration on these events through the database • Goal today: feedback on potential events and the database; if favorable, structure and location of the database

  8. Proposed Implementation of Database

  9. www.virbo.org/RBSPb Select June 1991 event Discussion: “We think that a large dynamic pressure pulse caused a sudden, dramatic dropout in PSD during this interval” Topics: Radial Diffusion, Sudden PSD dropouts, Chorus waves Select Sudden PSD dropout topic Publications: None Current Research: Yuri Shprits, reanalysis results

  10. Example: June 1991: • Example of sudden, catastrophic dropout in phase space density • Reanalysis results show that drop outs in the radiation belt fluxes occur when the pressure pulse hits the Earth’s magnetosphere • The correlation between pressure pulses and dropouts suggests that the primary cause of PSD dropouts in the outer portion of the radiation belts is loss to the magnetopause or tail, followed by outward radial diffusion

  11. www.virbo.org/RBSPb Events

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