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Cosmic Ray Electrons and Protons ~1 MeV - A 40 Year Study of Their Intensities from the Earth to the Heliopause and Beyond Into Local Interstellar Space by the CRS Experiment on Voyager 1

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 Added by William Webber
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Studies on Voyager 1 using the CRS instrument have shown the presence of sub-MeV electrons in the interstellar medium beyond the heliopause. We believe that these electrons are the very low energy tail of the distribution of galactic GeV cosmic ray electrons produced in the galaxy. If so this observation places constraints on the origin and possible source distribution of these electrons in the galaxy. The intensities of these electrons as well as MeV protons and other higher energy electrons and nuclei have been followed outward from the Earth to beyond the heliopause during the 40 years of the Voyager mission. Among the other new features found in this study of the radial dependence of the electron intensity in the heliosphere are: 1. The heliosheath is a source of sub-MeV electrons as well as the already known anomalous cosmic rays of MeV and above, none of which appear to escape from the heliosphere because of an almost impenetrable heliopause at these lower energies; 2. Solar modulation effects are observed for these MeV electrons throughout the heliosphere. These modulation effects are particularly strong for electrons in the heliosheath and comprise over 90 percent of the observed intensity change of these electrons of 10-60 MeV between the Earth and the heliopause. Even for nuclei of 1 GV in rigidity, over 30 percent of the total intensity difference between the Earth and the LIM occurs in the heliosheath; 3. The 2 MeV protons studied here for the first time beyond the heliopause are also part of the low energy tail of the spectrum of galactic cosmic ray protons, similar to the tail noted above for sub MeV galactic cosmic ray electrons.



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In this paper we report a study of the isotopic composition of Li, Be, B and N, Ne nuclei from a 5 year time period beyond the heliopause using the CRS instruments on Voyager. By comparing the isotopic ratios, 15N/14N and 22Ne/20Ne outside the heliosphere as measured at Voyager, and which are found to be significantly lower than those measured at the same energy inside the heliosphere, we have provided strong evidence that cosmic rays of this energy have lost as much as 200 MeV/nuc or more in the solar modulation process. This is in accordance with the so called force field description of this overall modulation by Gleeson and Axford. The measurements at Voyager confirm that the unusual 14N and 22Ne cosmic ray source abundances relative to solar abundances made earlier inside the heliosphere extend to the lower energies not accessible from near Earth measurements. The low energy Li, Be and B nuclei, which are believed to be purely secondary nuclei, are found to have a (previously unobservable) peak in the differential intensity spectrum at ~100 MeV/nuc. This is in agreement with propagation predictions. The intensities of these nuclei are ~10-20% higher than those predicted in a propagation model with a matter path length lambda = 9 g/cm2 at these low energies. The isotopic composition of Li, Be and B nuclei is also consistent with that expected from propagation through interstellar matter.
Voyager 1 has entered regions of different propagation conditions for energetic cosmic rays in the outer heliosheath beginning at a distance of about 111 AU from the Sun. This conclusion is based on the fact that the low energy 6-14 MeV galactic electron intensity suddenly increased by ~20% over a time period leg 10 days and the electron radial intensity gradient abruptly decreased from ~19%/AU to ~8%/AU at 2009.7 at a radial distance of 111.2 AU. A sudden radial gradient change was also observed at this time for >200 MeV protons. The gradients were constant during the time period before and after the electron increase. At about 2011.2 at a distance of 116.6 AU a second abrupt intensity increase was observed, this time for both electrons and protons. The increase for electrons was ~25% and occurred over a time period ~15 days or less. For >200 MeV protons the increase at this time was ~5% (unusually large) and occurred over a longer time period ~50 days. Between about 2011.2 and 2011.6, radial intensity gradients ~18%/AU and 3%/AU were observed for electrons and protons, respectively. These gradients were very similar to those observed for these particles before the 1st sudden increase at 2009.7. These large positive gradients observed after 2011.2 indicate that V1, although it has entered a different propagation region, is still within the overall heliospheric modulating region at least up to a time ~2011.6 (118.0 AU). In this paper we will discuss these events in more detail and consider possibilities for their explanation that have recently been suggested.
The magnetometer (MAG) on Voyager 1 (V1) has been sampling the interstellar magnetic field (ISMF) since August 2012. The V1 MAG observations have shown draped ISMF in the very local interstellar medium disturbed occasionally by significant enhancements in magnetic field strength. Using a three-dimensional, data driven, multi-fluid model, we investigated these magnetic field enhancements beyond the heliopause that are supposedly associated with solar transients. To introduce time-dependent effects at the inner boundary at 1 astronomical unit, we used daily averages of the solar wind parameters from the OMNI data set. The model ISMF strength, direction, and proton number density are compared with V1 data beyond the heliopause. The model reproduced the large-scale fluctuations between 2012.652 and 2016.652, including major events around 2012.9 and 2014.6. The model also predicts shocks arriving at V1 around 2017.395 and 2019.502. Another model driven by OMNI data with interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) removed at the inner boundary suggests that ICMEs may play a significant role in the propagation of shocks into the interstellar medium.
We have measured the intensity and spectra of the cosmic ray secondary isotopes 2H and 3He and the primary isotopes H and 4He between 20-85 MeV/nuc during a 5 year time period after Voyager 1 (V1) crossed the heliopause. The data reported here is from the B-end high energy telescope. The ratios of the intensities of the secondary to primary spectra of these nuclei at low energies are sensitive indicators for determining the amount of matter traversed at these energies by their galactic cosmic ray progenitor nuclei, after acceleration, in this case mostly 4He nuclei. The measurements of secondary 3He abundances indicate that cosmic ray 4He of energies between 30-100 MeV/nuc have traversed between 7-9 g/cm2 of interstellar matter (90% H, 10% He) in a Leaky Box propagation model. This path length is also consistent with the production of secondary 2H nuclei between 20-50 MeV/nuc, which is also produced mainly by 4He in a LBM. The Boron abundance, studied in separate papers, is also consistent with this path length at energies >30 MeV/nuc. These secondary intensities imply that the interstellar cosmic ray path length may be described in a LBM in a manner consistent with a mean path length,gamma= 20.6 beta P-0.45 at rigidities above ~0.5 GV (30 MeV/nuc for A/Z=2 nuclei). Both 2H and Boron have an excess intensity vs. the predictions for path lengths of 9 g/cm2 below 30 MeV/nuc.
79 - W.R. Webber , N. Lal , E.C. Stone 2017
We have obtained the energy spectra of cosmic ray He, B, C, O, Mg, S and Fe nuclei in the range 0.5-1.5 GeV/nuc and above using the penetrating particle mode of the High Energy Telescope, part of the Cosmic Ray Science (CRS) experiment on Voyagers 1 and 2. The data analysis procedures are the same as those used to obtain similar spectra from the identical V2 HET telescope while it was in the heliosphere between about 23 and 54 AU. The time period of analysis includes 4 years of data beyond the heliopause (HP). These new interstellar spectra are compared with various earlier experiments at the same energies at the Earth to determine the solar modulation parameter, phi. These new spectra are also compared with recent measurements of the spectra of the same nuclei measured by the same telescope at low energies. It is found that the ratio of intensities at 100 MeV/nuc to those at 1.0 GeV/nuc are significantly Z dependent. Some of this Z dependence can be explained by the Z2 dependence of energy loss by ionization in the 7-10 g/cm2 of interstellar H and He traversed by cosmic rays of these energies in the galaxy; some by the Z dependent loss due to nuclear interactions in this same material; some by possible differences in the source spectra of these nuclei and some by the non-uniformity of the source distribution and propagation conditions. The observed features of the spectra, also including a Z dependence of the peak intensities of the various nuclei, pose interesting problems related to the propagation and source distribution of these cosmic rays.
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