Equinoctial and solstitial averages of magnetospheric relativistic electrons: A strong semiannual modulation

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Abstract

2 MeV electrons throughout the outer trapping zone. Averages are performed over 3-month intervals centered on the spring and fall equinoxes and on the winter and summer solstices. Modulation is found such that equinoctial fluxes of electrons are nearly a factor of three larger than the solstitial fluxes based upon a superposed epoch analysis for 1992-1999. These semiannual modulations of relativistic electron fluxes are compared with concurrent solar wind data and are examined in terms of prior models of geomagnetic activity modulation. It is concluded that both southward IMF component merging (Russell-McPherron) and Kelvin-Helmholtz instability considerations (Boller-Stolov) may play important roles.

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Baker, D. N., Kanekal, S. G., Pulkkinen, T. I., & Blake, J. B. (1999). Equinoctial and solstitial averages of magnetospheric relativistic electrons: A strong semiannual modulation. Geophysical Research Letters, 26(20), 3193–3196. https://doi.org/10.1029/1999GL003638

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