The motion of energetic ions and electrons through space is strongly
constrained by the local magnetic field. The basic mode is rotation
around magnetic field lines, while at the same time sliding along
those lines, giving the particles a spiral trajectory.
On typical field lines, attached to the Earth at both ends, such motion
would soon lead the particles into the atmosphere, where they would
collide and lose their energy. However, an additional feature of trapped
motion usually prevents this from happening: the sliding motion slows
down as the particle moves into regions where the magnetic field is
strong, and it may even stop and reverse. It is as if the particles were
repelled from such regions, an interesting contrast with iron, which is
attracted to where the magnetic field is strong.
The magnetic force is much stronger near the Earth than far away, and
on any field line it is greatest at the ends, where the line enters the
atmosphere. Thus electrons and ions can remain trapped for a long
time, bouncing back and forth from one hemisphere to the other (see
picture above, not to scale--the actual spiral gets much smaller near
Earth). In this way the Earth holds on to its radiation belts.
In addition to spiraling and bouncing, the trapped particles also
slowly drift from one field line to another one like it, gradually going
all the way around Earth. Ions drift one way (clockwise, viewed from
north), electrons the other, and in either drift, the motion of electric
charges is equivalent to an electric current circling the Earth
clockwise.
That is the so-called ring current, whose magnetic field
slightly weakens the field observed over most of the Earth's surface.
During magnetic storms the ring current receives many additional ions and
electrons from the nightside "tail" of the magnetosphere and its effect
increases, though at the Earth's surface it is always very small, only
rarely exceeding 1% of the total magnetic field intensity.
More about trapped particles
Discovery of the Radiation Belt
Prior to 1958 scientists were quite aware that ions and electrons could
be trapped by the Earth's magnetic field, but not that such trapped
particles actually existed. At most it was proposed that during magnetic
storms a temporary trapped population created a ring current, decaying
again as the storm ebbed.
The years 1957-8 were designated as the "International Geophysical
Year" (IGY), and both the USA and the Soviet Union (Russia) prepared to
launch at that time artificial satellites, the first ever. Russia
successfully orbited its first Sputnik ("satellite") on October 4, 1957,
but the official US entry, Vanguard, failed at launch. The US then quickly
assembled an alternative rocket carrying a different satellite, the small
Explorer 1 built by James Van Allen and his team at the University of
Iowa. It was launched on 31 January, 1958.
Launch of Explorer 1
Click here
for a full size version of this image.
Explorer 1 carried only one instrument, a small detector of energetic
particles, a Geiger counter designed to observe cosmic rays (ions of very
high energy and unknown origin, arriving at Earth from distant space--see
later section). The experiment worked quite well at low altitudes, but at
the top of the orbit no particles at all were counted. Explorer 3, which
followed two months later, collected on tape a continuous record of data,
which revealed that the zero counts actually represented a very high level
of radiation. So many energetic particles hit the counter at the higher
altitudes, that its mode of operation was overwhelmed and it fell silent.
Not only was a radiation belt present at all times, it was remarkably
intense.
More about the discovery of the
radiation belt
The Earth's Radiation Belts
The Earth has two regions of trapped fast particles. The inner
radiation belt discovered by Van Allen is relatively compact,
extending perhaps one Earth radius above the equator (1 RE = 6371 km or
about 4000 miles). It consists of very energetic protons, a by-product of
collisions by cosmic ray ions with atoms of the atmosphere. The number of
such ions is relatively small, and the inner belt therefore accumulates
slowly, but because trapping near Earth is very stable, rather high
intensities are reached, even though their build-up may take years.
Further out is the large region of the ring current, containing
ions and electrons of much lower energy (the most energetic among them
also known as the "outer radiation belt"). Unlike the inner belt,
this population fluctuates widely, rising when magnetic storms inject
fresh particles from the tail of the magnetosphere, then gradually falling
off again. The ring current energy is mainly carried by the ions, most of
which are protons.
However, one also sees in the ring current "alpha particles," atoms of
helium which have lost their two electrons, a type of ion that is
plentiful in the solar wind.In addition, a certain percentage are O+
oxygen ions, similar to those in the ionosphere of the Earth, though much
more energetic. This mixture of ions suggests that ring current particles
probably come from more than one source.
More about the Earth's radiation
belts
Energy and Energetic Particles
Energy is the currency in which natural processes must be paid for: to
speed up motions, to turn a machine, to make the sun shine or drive an
electric current through a wire, energy is needed. A fundamental law of
nature states that energy never disappears, just changes its form: e.g.,
the energy of sunlight can be converted to electricity by a solar cell, or
the energy of the moving wind is converted by a windmill, but the total
amount stays the same.
Space phenomena involve energy on two very different scales. One
scale involves the energy of individual ions and electrons, which often
move at a respectable fraction of the velocity of light (an upper limit
which they can never reach). The faster the particle moves, the higher its
energy and the greater is the thickness of material needed to stop it.
Energies like these are measured in electron volts (eV): auroral
electrons have 1000-15,000 eV, protons in the inner belt perhaps 50
million eV, while the energy of cosmic ray ions may reach many billions.
In contrast, air molecules in the atmosphere only have about 0.03 eV,
raising what could be the most fundamental question in space research--how
come a few particles get so much?
The other scale is that of global space phenomena: magnetic
storms, substorms, auroral displays and electric currents linking Earth
and space. Who foots their energy bill? The main source of energy seems to
be the solar wind, but the pathways by which this energy is transported
and distributed in the magnetosphere are not yet completely clear.
More about energy
More about high-energy
particles
Synchronous Orbit
Probably the greatest number of operating satellites, more than 200,
inhabit the so-called synchronous orbit, a circular orbit above the
Earth's equator with a radius of 6.6 RE (Earth radii), approximately
42,000 km or 26,000 miles.
The orbital speed of any satellite depends on its distance from Earth.
In a circular orbit just outside the dense atmosphere, a satellite needs
only 90 minutes for one full circuit, but more distant satellites move
more slowly, and at a radius of 6.6 RE the period is close to 24 hours,
matching the rotation period of the Earth. A satellite at this distance,
above the equator, always stays above the same spot on Earth, and when
viewed from Earth (say, by a TV dish antenna) it is always in the same
direction in the sky.
This makes the synchronous orbit the perfect place for satellites
devoted to communications and to broadcasting, and it is also used for
world-wide weather monitoring, e.g. by the GOES series of satellites of
NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). The synchronous
orbit is also useful for scientific work, because on the nightside of the
Earth it lies quite close to the transition from the ring current to the
magnetospheric "tail".
More about synchronous
satellites
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