Polar rain flux variations in northern hemisphere observed by STSAT_1 with IMF geometry

  • Hong, Jin-Hy (Department of Physics, KAIST(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)) ;
  • Lee, J.J. (KASI(Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institue)) ;
  • Min, K.W. (Department of Physics, KAIST(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)) ;
  • Kim, K.H. (KASI(Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institue))
  • Published : 2008.10.22

Abstract

Polar rain is a spatially uniform precipitation of electrons with energies around 100eV that penetrate into the polar cap region where geomagnetic field lines are connected to the Interplanetary Magnetic Fields (IMF). Since their occurrences depend on the IMF sector polarity, they are believed to originate from the field aligned component of the solar wind. However, statistically direct correlation between polar rain and solar wind has not been shown. In this presentation, we examined specifically the IMF strength influence on the polar rain flux variation by classifying of IMF sector polarities. For this study, we employed the polar rain flux data measured by STSAT-1 and compared them with the solar wind parameters obtained from the WIND and ACE satellites. We found the direct mutuality between polar rain flux and IMF strength with correlation coefficient above 0.5. This proportional tendency appears stronger when the northern hemisphere is in the away sector of the IMF, which could be associated with a favorable geometry for magnetic reconnection. Simple particle trajectory simulation clearly shows why polar rain intensity depends on the IMF sector polarity. These results are consistent with the direct entry model of Fairfield et al.(1985), while low correlation coefficient with solar wind density, the similarity between slops of both energy spectra shows that transport process occur without acceleration.

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