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Simulations of the inner magnetospheric energetic electrons using the IMPTAM-VERB coupled model

  • In this study, we present initial results of the coupling between the Inner Magnetospheric Particle Transport and Acceleration Model (IMPTAM) and the Versatile Electron Radiation Belt (VERB-3D) code. IMPTAM traces electrons of 10-100 keV energies from the plasma sheet (L = 9 Re) to inner L-shell regions. The flux evolution modeled by IMPTAM is used at the low energy and outer L* computational boundaries of the VERB code (assuming a dipole approximation) to perform radiation belt simulations of energetic electrons. The model was tested on the March 17th, 2013 storm, for a six-day period. Four different simulations were performed and their results compared to satellites observations from Van Allen probes and GOES. The coupled IMPTAM-VERB model reproduces evolution and storm-time features of electron fluxes throughout the studied storm in agreement with the satellite data (within similar to 0.5 orders of magnitude). Including dynamics of the low energy population at L* = 6.6 increases fluxes closer to the heart of the belt and has aIn this study, we present initial results of the coupling between the Inner Magnetospheric Particle Transport and Acceleration Model (IMPTAM) and the Versatile Electron Radiation Belt (VERB-3D) code. IMPTAM traces electrons of 10-100 keV energies from the plasma sheet (L = 9 Re) to inner L-shell regions. The flux evolution modeled by IMPTAM is used at the low energy and outer L* computational boundaries of the VERB code (assuming a dipole approximation) to perform radiation belt simulations of energetic electrons. The model was tested on the March 17th, 2013 storm, for a six-day period. Four different simulations were performed and their results compared to satellites observations from Van Allen probes and GOES. The coupled IMPTAM-VERB model reproduces evolution and storm-time features of electron fluxes throughout the studied storm in agreement with the satellite data (within similar to 0.5 orders of magnitude). Including dynamics of the low energy population at L* = 6.6 increases fluxes closer to the heart of the belt and has a strong impact in the VERB simulations at all energies. However, inclusion of magnetopause losses leads to drastic flux decreases even below L* = 3. The dynamics of low energy electrons (max. 10s of keV) do not affect electron fluxes at energies >= 900 keV. Since the IMPTAM-VERB coupled model is only driven by solar wind parameters and the Dst and Kp indexes, it is suitable as a forecasting tool. In this study, we demonstrate that the estimation of electron dynamics with satellite-data-independent models is possible and very accurate.show moreshow less

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Author details:Angelica M. Castillo, Yuri Y. ShpritsORCiD, Natalia Ganushkina, Alexander Y. DrozdovORCiDGND, Nikita A. AseevORCiDGND, Dedong WangORCiD, Stepan DubyaginORCiD
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2019.05.014
ISSN:1364-6826
ISSN:1879-1824
Title of parent work (English):Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics
Publisher:Elsevier
Place of publishing:Oxford
Publication type:Article
Language:English
Year of first publication:2019
Publication year:2019
Release date:2020/11/08
Tag:Electron populations; IMPTAM; Radiation belts; VERB
Volume:191
Number of pages:17
Funding institution:[637302 PROGRESS]; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), GermanyGerman Research Foundation (DFG) [CRC 1294]; National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States [NNX17AI48G]; National Science Foundation, United StatesNational Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF 1663770]; Finnish Centre of Excellence in Research and Sustainable Space (Academy of innovation program [776287 SWAMI]
Organizational units:Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Physik und Astronomie
DDC classification:5 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik / 53 Physik / 530 Physik
Peer review:Referiert
Publishing method:Open Access
Open Access / Hybrid Open-Access
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