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Featured researches published by John Lyon.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Global MHD test particle simulations of >10 MeV radiation belt electrons during storm sudden commencement

B. T. Kress; M. K. Hudson; Mark Dixon Looper; J. M. Albert; John Lyon; Charles C. Goodrich

[1]xa0Prior to 2003, there are two known cases where ultrarelativistic (≳10 MeV) electrons appeared in the Earths inner zone radiation belts in association with high speed interplanetary shocks: the 24 March 1991 and the less well studied 21 February 1994 storms. During the March 1991 event electrons were injected well into the inner zone on a timescale of minutes, producing a new stably trapped radiation belt population that persisted for ∼10 years. More recently, at the end of solar cycle 23, a number of violent geomagnetic disturbances resulted in large variations in ultrarelativistic electrons in the inner zone, indicating that these events are less rare than previously thought. Here we present results from a numerical study of shock-induced transport and energization of outer zone electrons in the 1–7 MeV range, resulting in a newly formed 10–20 MeV electron belt near L ∼ 3. Test particle trajectories are followed in time-dependent fields from an MHD magnetospheric model simulation of the 29 October 2003 storm sudden commencement (SSC) driven by solar wind parameters measured at ACE. The newly formed belt is predominantly equatorially mirroring. This result is in part due to an SSC electric field pulse that is strongly peaked in the equatorial plane, preferentially accelerating equatorially mirroring particles. The timescale for subsequent pitch angle diffusion of the new belt, calculated using quasi-linear bounce-averaged diffusion coefficients, is in agreement with the observed delay in the appearance of peak fluxes at SAMPEX in low Earth orbit. We also present techniques for modeling radiation belt dynamics using test particle trajectories in MHD fields. Simulations are performed using code developed by the Center for Integrated Space Weather Modeling.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 2008

Global MHD test particle simulations of solar energetic electron trapping in the Earth's radiation belts

B. T. Kress; M. K. Hudson; Mark Dixon Looper; John Lyon; Charles C. Goodrich


Archive | 2007

MHD Simulations of Solar Wind-Geospace Coupling

S. Hernandez; Robert Edwards Lopez; Michael James Wiltberger; John Lyon


Archive | 2005

Conversion of Electromagnetic Power to Auroral and Cusp Ion Outflows

William Lotko; J. R. Gagne; David Lee Murr; John Lyon


Archive | 2004

Effect of the Anomalous Electron Heating on the Ionospheric Potential in the Global MHD Model.

V. G. Merkin; G. M. Milikh; S. A. Sharma; Dennis Papadopoulos; Charles C. Goodrich; John Lyon


Archive | 2003

Comparison of LFM Simulation With Tsyganenko Models and GOES Observations

Chin-Tser Huang; Harlan E. Spence; L. Kepko; John Lyon; Charles C. Goodrich; Timothy Bryan Guild; Michael James Wiltberger; John Hughes; H. J. Singer


Archive | 2003

A General Code Coupling Framework and the Dissection of the LFM Code

John Lyon; Charles C. Goodrich; Alan Sussman; Henrique Andrade; Michael James Wiltberger


Archive | 2003

Initial results from the coupled LFM-TING model

Michael James Wiltberger; Wei Wang; A. G. Burns; John Lyon; Stanley C. Solomon


Archive | 1998

Coupling Between Local and Global Activity During the Substorm Expansion Phase: Results From MHD Simulations and Comparison to Observations

Robert Edwards Lopez; Charles C. Goodrich; Michael James Wiltberger; K. Papadopoulos; John Lyon


Archive | 2010

Factors that Affect Geoeffective Length for Northward IMF

Shree Bhattarai; Robert Edwards Lopez; Robert Bruntz; Eric Jay Mitchell; Sophia Cockrell; John Lyon

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Wei Wang

Beijing University of Chemical Technology

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Harlan E. Spence

University of New Hampshire

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V. G. Merkin

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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A. G. Burns

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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S. Hernandez

Florida Institute of Technology

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S. P. Slinker

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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