Journal article
Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate, 2023
Postdoctoral researcher
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
University of Colorado Boulder
APA
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Grandin, M., Luttikhuis, T., Battarbee, M., Cozzani, G., Zhou, H., Turc, L., … Palmroth, M. (2023). First 3D hybrid-Vlasov global simulation of auroral proton precipitation and comparison with satellite observations. Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate.
Chicago/Turabian
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Grandin, M., Thijs Luttikhuis, M. Battarbee, G. Cozzani, Hongyang Zhou, L. Turc, Y. Pfau‐Kempf, et al. “First 3D Hybrid-Vlasov Global Simulation of Auroral Proton Precipitation and Comparison with Satellite Observations.” Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate (2023).
MLA
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Grandin, M., et al. “First 3D Hybrid-Vlasov Global Simulation of Auroral Proton Precipitation and Comparison with Satellite Observations.” Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate, 2023.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{m2023a,
title = {First 3D hybrid-Vlasov global simulation of auroral proton precipitation and comparison with satellite observations},
year = {2023},
journal = {Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate},
author = {Grandin, M. and Luttikhuis, Thijs and Battarbee, M. and Cozzani, G. and Zhou, Hongyang and Turc, L. and Pfau‐Kempf, Y. and George, H. and Horaites, K. and Gordeev, E. and Ganse, U. and Papadakis, Konstantinos E. and Alho, M. and Tesema, F. and Suni, J. and Dubart, M. and Tarvus, V. and Palmroth, M.}
}
The precipitation of charged particles from the magnetosphere into the ionosphere is one of the crucial coupling mechanisms between these two regions of geospace and is associated with multiple space weather effects, such as global navigation satellite system signal disruption and geomagnetically induced currents at ground level. While precipitating particle fluxes have been measured by numerous spacecraft missions over the past decades, it often remains difficult to obtain global precipitation patterns with a good time resolution during a substorm. Numerical simulations can help to bridge this gap and improve the understanding of mechanisms leading to particle precipitation at high latitudes through the global view they offer on the near-Earth space system. We present the first results on auroral (0.5–50 keV) proton precipitation within a 3-dimensional simulation of the Vlasiator hybrid-Vlasov model. The run is driven by southward interplanetary magnetic field conditions with constant solar wind parameters. We find that, on the dayside, cusp proton precipitation exhibits the expected energy–latitude dispersion and takes place in the form of successive bursts associated with the transit of flux transfer events formed through dayside magnetopause reconnection. On the nightside, the precipitation takes place within the expected range of geomagnetic latitudes, and it appears clearly that the precipitating particle injection is taking place within a narrow magnetic local time span, associated with fast Earthward plasma flows in the near-Earth magnetotail. Finally, the simulated precipitating fluxes are compared to observations from Defense Meteorological Satellite Program spacecraft during driving conditions similar to those in the simulation and are found to be in good agreement with the measurements.