Abstract

The atmospheric cutoff, similarly to the geomagnetic cutoff, is the lower energy limit for cosmic ray particles that can reach a given location on the ground and be registered by a detector there, e.g., by a neutron monitor. It is caused by the decreasing intensity of a cosmic-ray cascade in the lower atmosphere. Although the geomagnetic cutoff is higher than atmospheric over the most of the Earth’s surface, the latter is dominant and therefore defines the neutron monitor count rate in the polar regions. The atmospheric cutoff decreases with the altitude, and this provides additional sensitivity of high-altitude polar neutron monitors to low-energy particles, mainly solar energetic protons during the so-called ground-level enhancement events.In this work, we quantitatively estimated the atmospheric cutoff energies for 21 polar neutron monitor stations in conditions without a significant solar energetic particle event. The cutoff value can be as low as about 300 MeV for protons (VOSTOK and DOMC/DOMB stations), which is notably lower than about 430 MeV at sea level. In addition to that, we estimated the worst case scenario of the strongest-ever observed ground-level enhancement event GLE#05, occurred on the 23rd of February, 1956, and showed that the atmospheric cutoff becomes as low as about 100 MeV. In other words, some neutron monitor stations can register particles with energies of even about 100 MeV during an exceptionally strong solar particle event. It is explained by the highly intensive and soft spectrum of the event in its early delayed phase.

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