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Published December 2021 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

PSP/IS⊙IS observations of the 29 November 2020 solar energetic particle event

Abstract

Aims. On 29 November 2020, at 12:34 UT, active region 12790 erupted with an M4.4 class flare and a 1700 km s⁻¹ coronal mass ejection. Parker Solar Probe (PSP) was completing its seventh orbit around the Sun and was located at 0.8 au when the Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun (IS⊙IS) measured the ensuing mid-sized solar energetic particle (SEP) event. Not only was this the first SEP event with heavy ions above 10 MeV nuc⁻¹ to be measured by IS⊙IS, it was also measured by several spacecraft positioned around the Sun, making it the first circumsolar event of solar cycle 25. Here we describe an overview of the SEP event characteristics at PSP. Methods. Fluence spectra for electrons, H, He, O, and Fe were calculated for the decay portion of the event. For the entire time period of the event, it was possible to calculate fluence spectra for electrons, O, and Fe only due to instrumental mode changes in one of the IS⊙IS telescopes, affecting H and He during the period of peak intensities. Using higher time resolution data, we also studied the onset of the event and temporal variations in the particle intensities at the shock and during the magnetic cloud passage. Results. During the decay, the ion spectra are consistent with power laws at low energies with an exponential rollover at a few MeV nuc⁻¹, while the electron spectrum is consistent with a power law of index −5.3. Based on fits to the spectra, Fe/O and He/H abundance ratios as a function of energy are calculated and found to be nominal for large SEP events at hundreds of keV/nuc, but decrease strongly with increasing energy. The full-event spectra for O and Fe have similar shapes to those of the decay, but with higher roll-over energies. The electron spectrum for the full event is harder with an index of −3.4 and there is some evidence of higher energy components near ∼2 MeV and above ∼4 MeV. Despite the spacecraft being tilted 45° with respect to the nominal orientation of the spacecraft's long axis pointed towards the Sun, there is some anisotropy apparent in MeV protons during the onset of the event. Velocity dispersion is also evident, consistent with a solar release time of 13:15 UT and pathlength of 1.3 au. The arrival of the related magnetic cloud resulted in the suppression of SEP intensities, although a brief increase in particle intensities suggests PSP moved out of the cloud for ∼30 min. This appears to be the first medium-sized event in the rise of cycle 25 activity, with additional large events likely to occur. Additional details of the event beyond this overview can be found in several related papers.

Additional Information

© ESO 2021. Solar Orbiter First Results (Cruise Phase). Received: 31 March 2021 Accepted: 23 August 2021. This work was supported by NASA's Parker Solar Probe Mission, contract NNN06AA01C. Parker Solar Probe was designed, built, and is now operated by the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory as part of NASA's Living with a Star (LWS) program. Support from the LWS management and technical team has played a critical role in the success of the Parker Solar Probe mission. We thank all the scientists and engineers who have worked hard to make PSP a successful mission. In particular, we thank B. Kecman, W. R. Cook and J. Burnham, without whom the EPI-Hi instrument would not be possible. C. M. S. Cohen thanks T. Nieves-Chinchilla and A. Szabo for their helpful discussions regarding the shock and ICME observations, and N. Dresing for useful ones on electron ESP events. S. D. Bale acknowledges support of the Leverhulme Trust Visiting Professorship program. A. Vourlidas acknowledges support from NASA grants 80NSSC19K1261 and 80NSSC19K0069. The Sun Earth Connection Coronal and Heliospheric Investigation (SECCHI) was produced by an international consortium of the Naval Research Laboratory (USA), Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Lab. (USA), NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (USA), Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (UK), University of Birmingham (UK), Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany), Centre Spatiale de Liège (Belgium), Institut d'Optique Theorique et Appliquée (France), and Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale (France). STEREO/SECCHI data are available for download at https://secchi.nrl.navy.mil/. This paper uses data from the CACTus CME catalog, generated and maintained by the SIDC at the Royal Observatory of Belgium. The IS⊙IS data and visualization tools are available to the community at https://spacephysics.princeton.edu/missions-instruments/isois; data are also available via the NASA Space Physics Data Facility (https://spdf.gsfc.nasa.gov/). The GOES X-ray data are available from the National Centers for Environmental Information (https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/spaceweather.html).

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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