Using TeV Cosmic Rays to probe the Heliosphere's Boundary with the Local Interstellar Medium
Paolo Desiati, Juan Carlos D\'iaz V\'elez, Gwenael Giacinti, Francesco, Longo, Elena Orlando, Nikolai Pogorelov, Ming Zhang

TL;DR
This paper explores how TeV cosmic rays and observations from missions like IBEX can be used to probe the heliosphere's boundary with the local interstellar medium, combining modeling and experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive approach combining numerical modeling and observational data to study the heliosphere's boundary effects on cosmic rays.
Findings
Heliospheric boundary influences TeV cosmic ray arrival directions.
Combining observations and models helps isolate heliospheric effects on cosmic rays.
Numerical trajectory calculations provide insights into boundary region properties.
Abstract
The heliosphere is the magnetic structure formed by the Sun's atmosphere extending into the local interstellar medium (ISM). The boundary separating the heliosphere from the ISM is a still largely unexplored region of space. Even though both Voyager spacecraft entered the local ISM and are delivering data, they are two points piercing a vast region of space at specific times. The heliospheric boundary regulates the penetration of MeV- GeV galactic cosmic rays (CR) in the inner heliosphere. Interstellar keV neutral atoms are crucial to the outer heliosphere since they can penetrate unperturbed and transfer energy to the solar wind. Missions such as NASA's IBEX and Cassini are designed to detect neutral atoms and monitor charge exchange processes at the heliospheric boundary. The heliosphere does not modulate the TeV CR intensity, but it does influence their arrival direction…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
