High-energy solar particle events in cycle 24
Nat Gopalswamy, Pertti Makela, Seiji Yashiro, Hong Xie, Sachiko, Akiyama, Neeharika Thakur

TL;DR
This study analyzes the characteristics of high-energy solar energetic particle events in cycle 24, revealing factors like CME properties and ambient conditions that contribute to the low occurrence of ground level enhancements compared to previous cycles.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of CME and SEP event properties in cycle 24 with cycle 23, identifying key factors affecting high-energy SEP event frequency.
Findings
Only two GLE events occurred in cycle 24 by March 2015.
Most CMEs associated with SEP events were halos with similar speeds to cycle 23.
Factors like weak magnetic fields and poor connectivity reduce shock acceleration efficiency.
Abstract
The Sun is already in the declining phase of cycle 24, but the paucity of high-energy solar energetic particle (SEP) events continues with only two ground level enhancement (GLE) events as of March 31, 2015. In an attempt to understand this, we considered all the large SEP events of cycle 24 that occurred until the end of 2014. We compared the properties of the associated CMEs with those in cycle 23. We found that the CME speeds in the sky plane were similar, but almost all those cycle-24 CMEs were halos. A significant fraction of (16%) of the frontside SEP events were associated with eruptive prominence events. CMEs associated with filament eruption events accelerate slowly and attain peak speeds beyond the typical GLE release heights. When we considered only western hemispheric events that had good connectivity to the CME nose, there were only 8 events that could be considered as GLE…
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.
