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Proton Events and CME-Driven Shocks

The flat time profile seen in many large proton events as in Figure 1a is a signature of continuous acceleration. Suppose a shock wave accelerates some fraction of the local solar wind plasma to the energy of interest and the particles then expand like R as they come out to the observer. If the source solar wind density also varies like R, the intensity seen by an observer at distance R from the Sun will not vary with time. In the diffusive shock acceleration picture [ Lee 1983], particles near the shock are scattered back and forth across the shock by self-generated waves, gaining energy on each transit. The intensity of particles and waves decreases with distance from the shock to a point where there are not enough particles to produce sufficient waves; thence the particles stream freely away. This determines the maximum intensity that particles can have early in the event, a few x 100 protons/(cm sr s MeV) on the saturation plateau at a few MeV [ Reames 1990b, 1993, 1994; Ng and Reames 1994] as seen in Figure 1a and the lower panel in Figure 3. The intensity peak near the shock has historically been called the ``energetic storm particle'' (ESP) event. Note, however, that all the particles actually can come from the shock, those that arrive early as well as those in the ESP event.

At higher energies, where the particles are less numerous, fewer resonant waves are produced and the trapping structure (ESP event) weakens as the shock front expands like R. The decreased trapping results in less efficient acceleration and the intensity of the higher energy particles decreases with time. At sufficiently high energies the ESP structure does not survive all the way out to 1 AU and is not seen. Thus the highest energy particles are accelerated closest to the Sun. Generally the highest energy particles (100 MeV to >20 GeV) reach peak intensity when the CME is at 5-15 solar radii [ Kahler 1994]. The 1989 September 29 event at 105W has a CME speed of 1828 km/s and the 21 GeV particle intensity peaks at 5 solar radii [ Kahler 1994]. This is an event where Adams et al. [1993] find Q=12.5 above 200 MeV/amu. Clearly this suggests that this ``ground-level event'' is caused by a CME-driven shock propagating across the high corona to accelerate ambient, unheated plasma on the field line connected the Earth.

However, the story of the profiles of intensity vs. time is somewhat more complex, because of the variation of the profiles with the CME longitude. This variation, described by Cane et al. [1988], is shown for protons of different energy in Figure 3. Events near central meridian produce the intense flat profiles. Behind the shock is a second plateau region that is characterized by bi-directional streaming events [ Marsden et al. 1987; Richardson and Reames 1993] and magnetic clouds where the spacecraft is probably passing through the CME itself. For western events, the peak intensity occurs early when the nose of the shock is best connected to the observer. By the time the shock reaches 1 AU, the observer is connected far around on the eastern flank of the event where the shock is weak, if it is seen at all. For eastern events, the intensity may begin to rise when the coronal shock reaches the base of the observerūs field line, but the peak intensity may occur late, after the weak local shock has passed and the observer reaches field lines that connect to the strong acceleration region near the nose of the shock which is now far out beyond him. Reames [1994] shows large events that are viewed from 3 widely separated spacecraft.



next up previous
Next: Impulsive Flare Events Up: Solar energetic particles: A Previous: Particles from Impulsive



U.S. National Report to IUGG, 1991-1994
Rev. Geophys. Vol. 33 Suppl., © 1995 American Geophysical Union