Abstract

An intriguing feature of many solar energetic particle (SEP) events is the detection of particles over a very extended range of longitudes in the heliosphere. This may be due to peculiarities of the magnetic field in the corona, to a broad accelerator, to cross-field transport of the particles, or to a combination of these processes. The eruptive flare on 26 April 2008 provided an opportunity to study relevant processes under particularly favourable conditions since it occurred in a very quiet solar and interplanetary environment. This enabled us to investigate the physical link between a single well-identified coronal mass ejection (CME), electron acceleration as traced by radio emission, and the production of SEPs. We conduct a detailed analysis, which combines radio observations (Nancay Radio Heliograph and Nancay Decametre Array, Wind/Waves spectrograph) with remote-sensing observations of the corona in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and white light, as well as in situ measurements of energetic particles near 1AU (SoHO and STEREO spacecraft). By combining images taken from multiple vantage points, we were able to derive the time-dependent evolution of the 3D pressure front that was developing around the erupting CME. Magnetic reconnection in the post-CME current sheet accelerated electrons, which remained confined in closed magnetic fields in the corona, while the acceleration of escaping particles can be attributed to the pressure front ahead of the expanding CME. The CME accelerated electrons remotely from the parent active region, owing to the interaction of its laterally expanding flank, which was traced by an EUV wave, with the ambient corona. SEPs detected at one STEREO spacecraft and SoHO were accelerated later, when the frontal shock of the CME intercepted the spacecraft-connected interplanetary magnetic field line. The injection regions into the heliosphere inferred from the radio and SEP observations are separated in longitude by about 140 •. The observations for this event show that it is misleading to interpret multi-spacecraft SEP measurements in terms of one acceleration region in the corona. The different acceleration regions are linked to different vantage points in the interplanetary space.

Highlights

  • A correct theory of the acceleration and subsequent transport of solar energetic particles (SEPs) in the heliosphere must explain the wide range of heliolongitudes over which a given SEP event can be detected in the inner heliosphere

  • While this fact was known before (Wibberenz & Cane 2006), the comprehensive imaging and in situ measurements taken by the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) mission have demonstrated that the release of energetic particles over a very broad range of longitudes is neither an exceptional fact nor is it restricted to strong events (Wiedenbeck et al 2010; Dresing et al 2012, 2014; Lario et al 2013; Gómez-Herrero et al 2015)

  • Just as for other coronal mass ejection (CME) events, we found that the ellipsoid that passes through the contour of the pressure front observed in coronagraphic images intersects the solar surface at the location of the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) wave

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A correct theory of the acceleration and subsequent transport of solar energetic particles (SEPs) in the heliosphere must explain the wide range of heliolongitudes over which a given SEP event can be detected in the inner heliosphere. We use non-thermal radio emissions as tracers of electron acceleration and transport during the eruption of a CME on 26 April 2008, during otherwise very quiet solar conditions in the deep solar minimum between cycles 23 and 24. This enables a study that does not suffer from coincidental associations of phenomena related with different events that happen at. To map the plasma environment of the CME and its parent active region, we use EUV imaging and white-light coronagraphy from the STEREO and SoHO spacecraft, and advanced techniques of detailed modeling based on complementary sets of remote-sensing observations (Rouillard et al 2016).

Overview of the event on 26 April 2008
Overview
Remote type III burst
Type II burst
Magnetic configuration and EUV-wave observations
Solar energetic particles
Comparison with 3D CME modeling
CME and type III bursts
CME and type II burst
30 MHz 40 MHz
CME shock and SEP acceleration
Discussion
CME shock
CME shock and type II radio burst
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call