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Time‐Integral Correlations of Multiple Variables With the Relativistic‐Electron Flux at Geosynchronous Orbit: The Strong Roles of Substorm‐Injected Electrons and the Ion Plasma Sheet
Author(s) -
Borovsky Joseph E.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1002/2017ja024476
Subject(s) - geosynchronous orbit , magnetosphere , substorm , solar wind , physics , plasma sheet , electron , flux (metallurgy) , computational physics , geophysics , atmospheric sciences , plasma , quantum mechanics , astronomy , chemistry , satellite , organic chemistry
Time‐integral correlations are examined between the geosynchronous relativistic electron flux index F e1.2 and 31 variables of the solar wind and magnetosphere. An “evolutionary algorithm” is used to maximize correlations. Time integrations (into the past) of the variables are found to be superior to time‐lagged variables for maximizing correlations with the radiation belt. Physical arguments are given as to why. Dominant correlations are found for the substorm‐injected electron flux at geosynchronous orbit and for the pressure of the ion plasma sheet. Different sets of variables are constructed and correlated with F e1.2 : some sets maximize the correlations, and some sets are based on purely solar wind variables. Examining known physical mechanisms that act on the radiation belt, sets of correlations are constructed (1) using magnetospheric variables that control those physical mechanisms and (2) using the solar wind variables that control those magnetospheric variables. F e1.2 ‐increasing intervals are correlated separately from F e1.2 ‐decreasing intervals, and the introduction of autoregression into the time‐integral correlations is explored. A great impediment to discerning physical cause and effect from the correlations is the fact that all solar wind variables are intercorrelated and carry much of the same information about the time sequence of the solar wind that drives the time sequence of the magnetosphere.

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