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Drift orbit bifurcations and cross‐field transport in the outer radiation belt: global MHD and integrated test‐particle simulations

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posted on 2025-08-01, 13:09 authored by RT Desai, JP Eastwood, RB Horne, HJ Allison, O Allanson, CEJ Watt, JWB Eggington, SA Glauert, NP Meredith, MO Archer, FA Staples, L Mejnertsen, JK Tong, JP Chittenden
Energetic particle fluxes in the outer magnetosphere present a significant challenge to modelling efforts as they can vary by orders of magnitude in response to solar wind driving conditions. In this article, we demonstrate the ability to propagate test particles through global MHD simulations to a high level of precision and use this to map the cross-field radial transport associated with relativistic electrons undergoing drift orbit bifurcations (DOBs). The simulations predict DOBs primarily occur within an Earth radius of the magnetopause loss cone and appears significantly different for southward and northward interplanetary magnetic field orientations. The changes to the second invariant are shown to manifest as a dropout in particle fluxes with pitch angles close to 90◦ and indicate DOBs are a cause of butterfly pitch angle distributions within the night-time sector. The convective electric field, not included in previous DOB studies, is found to have a significant effect on the resultant long term transport, and losses to the magnetopause and atmosphere are identified as a potential method for incorporating DOBs within Fokker-Planck transport models.

Funding

EP/T01735X/1.

NE/P017142/1

NE/P017347/1

NE/P10738X/1

NE/R016038/1

NE/V00249X/1

NE/V002759/2

NE/V013963/1

Natural Environment Research Council

ST/W002078/1

Science and Technology Facilities Council

UKRI

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© 2021 American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record The simulation data used in this paper is openly available on the UK Polar Data Centre (UK PDC): https://doi.org/10.5285/3774fa5b-f2fb-42c3-9091-5b11ac9744ea

Journal

Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

Publisher

Wiley/American Geophysical Union

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2021-09-23T10:58:09Z

FOA date

2021-09-24T09:30:20Z

Citation

Published online 17 September 2021

Department

  • Mathematics and Statistics

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