Properties of Ground Level Enhancement Events and the Associated Solar Eruptions during Solar Cycle 23
N. Gopalswamy, H. Xie, S. Yashiro, S. Akiyama, P. M\"akel\"a, and I., G. Usoskin

TL;DR
This study analyzes Ground Level Enhancement (GLE) events during Solar Cycle 23, revealing their association with intense solar eruptions, large active regions, and shock formation at specific CME heights, with delays in particle release.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of GLE properties, their timing, and the relationship with CME heights and shock formation, offering new insights into particle acceleration mechanisms during solar eruptions.
Findings
GLEs are linked to intense X-class flares and high-speed CMEs.
GLE particle release occurs at CME heights around 3.09 solar radii.
Shock formation precedes GLE particle release by about 17 minutes.
Abstract
We present an overview of the observed properties of the GLEs and those of the associated flares and CMEs. The solar eruptions are very intense involving X-class flares and extreme CME speeds (average ~2000 km/s). The active regions in which the GLE events originate are generally large: 1290 msh (median 1010 msh) compared to 934 msh (median: 790 msh) for SEP-producing active regions. The initial acceleration of GLE-associated CMEs is much larger (by a factor of 2) than that of ordinary CMEs (2.3 km/s2 vs.1 km/s2). The GLE particle release is delayed with respect to the onset of all electromagnetic signatures of the eruptions: type II bursts, low frequency type III bursts, soft X-ray flares and CMEs. The presence of metric type II radio bursts some 17 min (median: 16 min; range: 3 to 48 min) before the GLE onset indicates shock formation well before the particle release. The release of…
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