Variability in energetic particle observations at strong interplanetary shocks: Multi-spacecraft observations
Domenico Trotta, Timothy S. Horbury, Joe Giacalone

TL;DR
This study uses multi-spacecraft observations to analyze how interplanetary shock variability influences energetic particle acceleration at different energies, revealing spatial and evolutionary effects on particle responses.
Contribution
It introduces a new cross-correlation technique to quantify energetic particle variability across multiple spacecraft observations of a strong interplanetary shock.
Findings
High-energy particle profiles differ between 0.8 and 1 AU observations.
Shock evolution affects the efficiency of high-energy particle production.
Spatial irregularities modulate energetic particle responses at various energies.
Abstract
Context. Interplanetary (IP) shock waves offer an unparalleled opportunity to directly study the elusive mechanisms of particle acceleration that are pervasive in our Universe. Novel spacecraft missions, orbiting poorly-explored regions of the heliosphere, opened a new observational window on particle acceleration at IP shocks that is relevant to space and astrophysical plasmas. Aims. We address shock variability and its effects on the production of accelerated particles at different energies. We leveraged three different missions that directly observed a strong IP shock in a range of separations that cannot be achieved with a single mission. We linked spatial shock irregularities and evolutionary effects to the observed energetic particle responses in the shock passage at the three different heliospheric vantage points. Methods. We exploited direct observations of magnetic field,…
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