Archimedean Spiral Distribution of Energetic Particles in Earth's Inner Radiation Belt

Author:

Sun Weiqin12ORCID,Yang Jian2ORCID,Wang Wenrui2,Cui Jun1ORCID,Toffoletto Frank3ORCID,Yue Chao4ORCID,Gkioulidou Matina5ORCID,Andrew Gerrard J.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Atmospheric Sciences Sun Yat‐sen University Zhuhai China

2. Department of Earth and Space Sciences Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

3. Department of Physics and Astronomy Rice University Houston TX USA

4. Institute of Space Physics and Applied Technology Peking University Beijing China

5. Applied Physics Laboratory The Johns Hopkins University Laurel MD USA

6. Center for Solar‐Terrestrial Research New Jersey Institute of Technology Newark NJ USA

Abstract

AbstractArchimedean spirals are common in various fields such as biology, engineering, astronomy, and space physics. Here we report the discovery of patterns resembling the general Archimedean spirals in particle distributions in the Earth radiation belt. Our analytic theory and numerical simulations demonstrate that electrons with initially asymmetric spatial distributions form such spirals in the inner magnetosphere, where particles at smaller radial distances move more slowly in angular velocity. These spirals result in time‐varying peaks and valleys in particle fluxes, referred to as “zebra stripes,” which are well consistent with Van Allen Probes measurements. Although the initial asymmetric distribution may be seeded by the electric field in the magnetosphere, the spiral formation does not require them. Furthermore, we show that, due to the same fundamental motion of charged particles in regions dominated by dipole fields, this spiral phenomenon may also appear in the proton distributions, as well as in planetary magnetospheres.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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