The Intensities of Cosmic Ray H and He Nuclei at ~250 MeV/nuc Measured by Voyagers 1 and 2 - Using these Intensities to Determine the Solar Modulation Parameter in the Inner Heliosphere and the Heliosheath Over a 40 Year Time Period
W.R. Webber, E.C. Stone, A.C. Cummings, B. Heikkila, N. Lal

TL;DR
This study analyzes 40 years of Voyager 1 and 2 measurements of cosmic ray H and He nuclei intensities at ~250 MeV/nuc to determine the solar modulation parameter and its spatial-temporal variations in the heliosphere.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the solar modulation potential over four solar cycles using Voyager data, revealing spatial and temporal structures in cosmic ray modulation.
Findings
Modulation potential correlates with solar activity cycles.
Spatially coherent structures move outward at up to 700 km/s.
A sudden decrease in modulation potential occurs near the heliopause.
Abstract
We have determined the solar modulation potential, phi, vs. time that is observed at Voyager 1 and 2 from measurements of the H and He nuclei intensities at a common energy of 250 MeVnuc. The H nuclei have a rigidity 0.7 GV, the He nuclei 1.4 GV. These measurements cover a 40 year time period, which includes almost 4 cycles of solar 11 year sunspot variations, throughout the inner heliosphere out to the HTS at distances of 95 AU and 85 AU, respectively at V1 and V2, and then beyond in the heliosheath. Inside the HTS the modulation potential vs. time curves at V1 and V2 show a very similar temporal structure to those observed at the Earth. During a later period of maximum solar modulation from 2000.0 to 2005.0 when V1 and V2 are in the outer heliosphere between 60-94 AU, the main temporal features of the modulation potential curves at all 3 locations match up with appropriate time delays…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
