Interplanetary magnetic structures guiding solar relativistic particles
Sophie Masson, Pascal D\'emoulin, Sergio Dasso, Karl-Ludwig Klein

TL;DR
This study investigates how interplanetary magnetic structures, especially ICMEs, influence the propagation paths and timing of relativistic solar particles reaching Earth, revealing longer paths and delayed arrivals during transient events.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of IMF configurations during solar particle events, highlighting the impact of ICMEs on particle path lengths and arrival times, using multi-instrument data and modified velocity dispersion analysis.
Findings
Most events (7/10) occurred near ICMEs.
Path lengths are longer in ICMEs (1.5-2.6 AU).
Particle arrival times are delayed in transient structures.
Abstract
Relating in situ measurements of relativistic solar particles to their parent activity in the corona requires understanding the magnetic structures that guide them from their acceleration site to the Earth. Relativistic particle events are observed at times of high solar activity, when transient magnetic structures such as Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections (ICMEs) often shape the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). They may introduce interplanetary paths that are longer than nominal, and magnetic connections rooted far from the nominal Parker spiral. We present a detailed study of the IMF configurations during ten relativistic solar particle events of the 23rd activity cycle to elucidate the actual IMF configuration guiding the particles to Earth, where they are measured by neutron monitors. We use magnetic field (MAG) and plasma parameter measurements (SWEPAM) from ACE, and…
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