Geomagnetically Quiet Period Analysis of Relativistic Electrons, Auroral Precipitation, Joule Heating, and Ring Current During the Years of 1999, 2000 and 2004

Authors

  • R. K. Mishra
  • A. Gautam
  • P. Poudel
  • N. Parajuli
  • A. Silwal
  • B. Adhikari
  • B. R. Tiwari
  • S. P. Gautam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/jnphyssoc.v7i2.38633

Keywords:

Auroral Precipitation, Relativistic Electron, Ring Current, Magnetosphere, Joule Heating, Cross-Correlation

Abstract

This work presents the study of the quietest time variation in relativistic electrons, auroral precipitation, ring current, and joule heating during 1999, 2000, and 2004. Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) data on relativistic electrons with energies above 0.6 MeV, 2 MeV, and 4 MeV were analyzed. The time-series analysis of the relativistic electrons over a 24-hour averaged interval reveals a precise 24-hour modulation of the relativistic electron population during all seasons for energies above 0.6 MeV and 2 MeV, and during the winter season for higher energies above 4 MeV. In addition, relativistic electron fluxes at energies above 0.6 MeV and above 2 MeV were higher during the descending phase of the solar cycle compared to the ascending and solar-maximum phases. The cross-correlation analysis presented a strong correlation of Joule heating, ring current, and auroral precipitation with the relativistic electron population in three energy bands considered, as indicated by the zero-time lag. Studying the quiet time variation of relativistic electrons will lead to more complete ionospheric models, which were previously limited to the geomagnetically disturbed period.

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Published

2021-08-06

How to Cite

Mishra, R. K., Gautam, A., Poudel, P., Parajuli, N., Silwal, A., Adhikari, B., Tiwari, B. R., & Gautam, S. P. (2021). Geomagnetically Quiet Period Analysis of Relativistic Electrons, Auroral Precipitation, Joule Heating, and Ring Current During the Years of 1999, 2000 and 2004. Journal of Nepal Physical Society, 7(2), 126–137. https://doi.org/10.3126/jnphyssoc.v7i2.38633

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