Solar source of energetic particles in interplanetary space during the 2006 December 13 event
C. Li, Y. Dai, J. -C. Vial, C. J. Owen, S. A. Matthews, Y. H. Tang, C., Fang, and A. N. Fazakerley

TL;DR
This study provides evidence linking solar flare magnetic reconnection to energetic particle acceleration during the 2006 December 13 event, demonstrating the transition from flare confinement to CME-driven shock acceleration.
Contribution
It combines multi-wavelength observations, magnetic field modeling, and radio data to establish the solar source and acceleration mechanisms of energetic particles in a major SEP event.
Findings
Initial particle release coincides with flare emission.
Magnetic reconnection correlates with nonthermal particle acceleration.
Open magnetic field lines enable particle escape into interplanetary space.
Abstract
An X3.4 solar flare and a fast halo coronal mass ejection (CME) occurred on 2006 December 13, accompanied by a high flux of energetic particles recorded both in near-Earth space and at ground level. Our purpose is to provide evidence of flare acceleration in a major solar energetic particle (SEP) event. We first present observations from ACE/EPAM, GOES, and the Apatity neutron monitor. It is found that the initial particle release time coincides with the flare emission and that the spectrum becomes softer and the anisotropy becomes weaker during particle injection, indicating that the acceleration source changes from a confined coronal site to a widespread interplanetary CME-driven shock. We then describe a comprehensive study of the associated flare active region. By use of imaging data from HINODE/SOT and SOHO/MDI magnetogram, we infer the flare magnetic reconnection rate in the form…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
