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Article

An improved empirical model of electron and ion fluxes at geosynchronous orbit based on upstream solar wind conditions

M. H. DentonCenter for Space Plasma Physics Space Science Institute Boulder Colorado USAM. G. HendersonISR‐1 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos New Mexico USAV. K. JordanovaISR‐1 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos New Mexico USAM. F. ThomsenPlanetary Science Institute Tucson Arizona USAJoseph E. BorovskyCenter for Space Plasma Physics Space Science Institute Boulder Colorado USAJ. R. WoodroffeISR‐1 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos New Mexico USAD. P. HartleyDepartment of Physics and Astronomy University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USADavid PitchfordSES Engineering Betzdorf Luxembourg
2016en
ABI

Abstract

Abstract A new empirical model of the electron fluxes and ion fluxes at geosynchronous orbit (GEO) is introduced, based on observations by Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) satellites. The model provides flux predictions in the energy range ~1 eV to ~40 keV, as a function of local time, energy, and the strength of the solar wind electric field (the negative product of the solar wind speed and the z component of the magnetic field). Given appropriate upstream solar wind measurements, the model provides a forecast of the fluxes at GEO with a ~1 h lead time. Model predictions are tested against in‐sample observations from LANL satellites and also against out‐of‐sample observations from the Compact Environmental Anomaly Sensor II detector on the AMC‐12 satellite. The model does not reproduce all structure seen in the observations. However, for the intervals studied here (quiet and storm times) the normalized root‐mean‐square deviation < ~0.3. It is intended that the model will improve forecasting of the spacecraft environment at GEO and also provide improved boundary/input conditions for physical models of the magnetosphere.

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