Atmospheric scattering of energetic electrons from near-Earth space

Vassilis Angelopoulos,Ethan Tsai,Colin Wilkins,Xiaojia Zhang,Anton Artemyev,Jiang Liu,Andrei Runov, Laura Iglesias,Drew Turner,Robert Strangeway,Richard Wirz,Wen Li, Lydia Adair, Ryan Caron, Maxwell Chung, Patrick Cruce, Eric Grimes, Kathryn Hector, Michael Lawson, David Leneman,Emmanuel Masongsong, Austin Norris, Cynthia Russell, Christopher Shaffer,Jiashu Wu, Sharvani Jha,James King, Suyash Kumar, Kelly Nguyen,Michelle Nguyen,Akhil Palla, Alexa Roosnovo, Erica Xie, Rebecca Yap, Chanel Young,J. B. Blake,Nick Adair, Matthew Allen, Michael Anderson, Michael Arreola-Zamora, Jessica Artinger, Jeffrey Asher,Donna Branchevsky, Michael Capitelli, Rommel Castro, Gary Chao, Nathan Chung,Micah Cliffe, Kyle Colton, Cian Costello, Danny Depe,Benjamin Domae, Sarah Eldin, Lauren Fitgibbon, Alex Flemming, Ian Fox, Duncan Frederick, Alex Gilbert, Anthony Gildemeister, Alexander Gonzalez, Brayden Hesford, Renee Krieger, Kevin Lian, Jason Mao, Emmons McKinney,Jordan Miller, Matt Nuesca, Elisa Park, Carter Pedersen, Ziyuan Qu, Reuben Rozario, Erik Rye, Ryan Seaton, Akshaya Subramanian, Stephen Sundin, Aysen Tan, Wynne Turner, Austin Villegas, Matt Wasden, Graham Wing, Cass Wong, Anais Zarifian, Gary Zhang

crossref(2021)

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Abstract
Abstract In near-Earth space, the magnetosphere, energetic electrons (tens to thousands of kiloelectron volts) orbit around Earth, forming the radiation belts. When scattered by magnetospheric processes, these electrons precipitate to the upper atmosphere, where they deplete ozone, a radiatively active gas, modifying global atmospheric circulation. Relativistic electrons (those above a few hundred kiloelectron volts), can reach the lowest altitudes and have the strongest effects on the upper atmosphere; their loss from the magnetosphere is also important for space weather. Previous models have only considered magnetospheric scattering and precipitation of energetic electrons; atmospheric scattering of such electrons has not been adequately considered, principally due to lack of observations. Here we report the first observations of this process. We find that atmospherically-scattered energetic (relativistic) electrons form a low-intensity, persistent “drizzle”, whose integrated energy flux is comparable to (greater than) that of the more intense but ephemeral precipitation by magnetospheric scattering. Thus, atmospheric scattering of energetic electrons is important for global atmospheric circulation, radiation belt flux evolution, and the repopulation of the magnetosphere with lower-energy, secondary electrons.
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