What Are Special About Ground-Level Events? Flares, CMEs, Active Regions And Magnetic Field Connection
N. V. Nitta, Y. Liu, M. L. DeRosa, and R. W. Nightingale

TL;DR
This study investigates the unique conditions and observable properties of ground-level events (GLEs) during Solar Cycle 23, analyzing their association with solar eruptions, active regions, and magnetic connectivity to better understand their rare occurrence.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of GLEs, showing that their occurrence is not solely determined by eruption magnitude or active region complexity, and highlights the limited role of magnetic connection.
Findings
GLEs are not distinguishable by eruption magnitude or AR complexity.
Half of GLEs are well-connected magnetically to Earth.
GLE onset times are largely influenced by CME-driven shock development.
Abstract
Ground level events (GLEs) occupy the high-energy end of gradual solar energetic particle (SEP) events. They are associated with coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and solar flares, but we still do not clearly understand the special conditions that produce these rare events. During Solar Cycle 23, a total of 16 GLEs were registered, using ground-based neutron monitor data. We first ask if these GLEs are clearly distinguishable from other SEP events observed from space. Setting aside possible difficulties in identifying all GLEs consistently, we then try to find observables which may unmistakably isolate these GLEs by studying the basic properties of the associated eruptions and the active regions (ARs) that produced them. It is found that neither the magnitudes of the CMEs and flares nor the complexities of the ARs give sufficient conditions for GLEs. It is possible to find CMEs, flares or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
