Researchers discover source of super-fast electron rain

Phys.org  March 30, 2022 The classical quasi-linear theory of electron precipitation through moderately fast diffusive interactions with plasma waves predicts that precipitating electron fluxes cannot exceed fluxes of electrons trapped in the radiation belt, setting an apparent upper limit for electron precipitation. From low-altitude satellite observations, an international team of researchers (USA – UCLA, France, Japan) has shown that ~100 keV electron precipitation rates often exceed this apparent upper limit. They demonstrated that such superfast precipitation is caused by nonlinear electron interactions with intense plasma waves, which have not been previously incorporated in radiation belt models. The high occurrence rate of […]

U.S. military tests radiation belt cleanup in space

Science Magazine  January 3, 2020 High-energy electrons, shed by radioactive debris and trapped by Earth’s magnetic field, are fritzing out the satellites’ electronics and solar panels. Now, defense scientists are trying to devise a cure. Three space experiments—one now in orbit and two being readied for launch in 2021—aim to gather data on how to drain high-energy electrons trapped by Earth’s magnetic field in radiation belts encircling the planet…read more. Related article