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Interpreting Spectral Forms Observed in Large Solar Energetic Particle Events. C.M.S. Cohen and R.A. Mewaldt Caltech. G.M. Mason APL. ULEIS. SIS. Observations. Combined ULEIS + SIS heavy ion spectra Many large SEP events have breaks in the spectra Leads to energy dependent composition.
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Interpreting Spectral Forms Observed in Large Solar Energetic Particle Events C.M.S. Cohen and R.A. Mewaldt Caltech G.M. Mason APL Utah
ULEIS SIS Observations • Combined ULEIS + SIS heavy ion spectra • Many large SEP events have breaks in the spectra • Leads to energy dependent composition Utah
H CNO Fe Observations and Models • Model of Li et al. also shows • element dependent spectral breaks • energy dependent composition Utah
Anomalous Cosmic Rays Cummings, Stone & Webber Diffusion Effects • Motivated by observations of ACRs, examine diffusion coefficients = 1/3 v • Assume is a power-law in rigidity ~ (M/Q) E(+1)/2 • Break energies should occur at same value of E1/E2=[(Q/M)1/(Q/M)2]2/(+1) Utah
Shifted Spectra • Using oxygen spectra as a ‘template’ • Assume Q/M values Utah
Shifted Spectra • Using oxygen spectra as a ‘template’ • Assume Q/M values • Use E-break scaling law E1/E2=[(Q/M)1/(Q/M)2]2/(+1) and determine best value for each SEP event to obtain energy-independent composition • Produces one value per event October-November 2003 events Cohen et al. 2005 Utah
Current Results • Two events (2001 Dec 26, 2002 Feb 20) did not have sufficient breaks to constrain the analysis • Results reasonably similar in quality to previous analysis • highest and lowest energies do not always track • Ca is often different 2001 Nov 4 2001 Dec 26 2002 Feb 20 2002 Apr 21 2002 Aug 24 2002 Nov 9 Utah
done previously Current Results • Alpha values are slightly lower than previous analysis (0.6-1.3 vs 0.8-2.7) • Correlated with Fe/O at 0.5 MeV/n?? • probably not if remove two ‘unconstrained’ points • two points at same have different Fe/O Utah
done previously Current Results • Alpha values are slightly lower than previous analysis (0.6-1.3 vs 0.8-2.7) • Not correlated with Fe/O at 10 MeV/n Utah
Relation to Wave Spectra • Values of can be related to turbulence spectrum ~k-q = 2-q (Droege, 1994) • Wave indices < 5/3 suggest there is an additional source of turbulence present Utah
Relation to Wave Spectra • Ng, Reames and Tylka (2003) showed that proton-amplified Alfven waves can substantially distort the wave spectrum • The distortion is in the general rigidity (energy) region of the spectral breaks • Distortion can result in regions of flat or increasing wave spectra Utah
At the Shock • Spectra just downstream of the shock can be examined for spectral breaks • This is where the forms from Ellison and Ramaty are most applicable • We also have some measured charge state values at high energies from MAST/SAMPEX during the events with big shocks (10/28/2003 and 10/29/2003) • Simulations of Li et al. suggest break points will be organized as (Q/M)2 Utah
Ellison-Ramaty fits to spectra for H to Fe from the 10/29/03 shock (0600-1200 UT) The power-law index is fixed at -1.3 The Eo values range from 3.5 to 31 MeV/nuc Utah
Charge-State Measurements from SAMPEX (Data from Labrador et al.) Curves: Arnaud and Rothenflug ~20 to 60 MeV/nuc Utah
Q/M-Dependence of Spectral Breaks at Shocks Eo (MeV/nuc) Utah
Summary • Large SEP events often have spectral breaks which leads to energy-dependent composition • Some of this can be understood through diffusion effects away from the acceleration region • although the Qs are assumed and not measured/varied • Many events indicate a source of additional turbulence near the acceleration region • Examination of 2 ESP events shows Q/M organization of the spectral breaks • 1 agrees with Li et al. prediction of (Q/M)2 • 1 does not agree with Li et al. Utah
Future Work • Examine other • events • ESP intervals • elements (H, He, C, N) • Explore the effect of different charge state assumptions • Investigate correlations between and • shock parameters • CME parameters Utah