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Published October 2012 | public
Journal Article

A Twin-CME Scenario for Ground Level Enhancement Events

Abstract

Ground Level Enhancement (GLEs) events are extreme Solar Energetic Particle (SEP) events. Protons in these events often reach ∼GeV/nucleon. Understanding the underlying particle acceleration mechanism in these events is a major goal for Space Weather studies. In Solar Cycle 23, a total of 16 GLEs have been identified. Most of them have preceding CMEs and in-situ energetic particle observations show some of them are enhanced in ICME or flare-like material. Motivated by this observation, we discuss here a scenario in which two CMEs erupt in sequence during a short period of time from the same Active Region (AR) with a pseudo-streamer-like pre-eruption magnetic field configuration. The first CME is narrower and slower and the second CME is wider and faster. We show that the magnetic field configuration in our proposed scenario can lead to magnetic reconnection between the open and closed field lines that drape and enclose the first CME and its driven shock. The combined effect of the presence of the first shock and the existence of the open close reconnection is that when the second CME erupts and drives a second shock, one finds both an excess of seed population and an enhanced turbulence level at the front of the second shock than the case of a single CME-driven shock. Therefore, a more efficient particle acceleration will occur. The implications of our proposed scenario are discussed.

Additional Information

© 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V. Received: 31 January 2011; Accepted: 8 August 2011; Published online: 17 January 2012. This work is supported in part by NSF ATM-0847719 (CAREER), NASA NNX07AL52A (EpSCoR) and an ORAU Ralph E. Power Junior Faculty Enhancement Award for GL at UAHuntsville. The work at Caltech was supported by NASA grants under grants NNX8AI11G and NNX06AC21G. The authors thank Dr. Nat Gopalswamy and Dr. Nariaki Nitta for organizing the two GLE workshops where this work was largely completed.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023