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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Impact des structures du vent solaire sur les ceintures de radiation Terrestres / Impact of the solar wind structures on the terrestrial radiation belts

Benacquista, Rémi 23 November 2017 (has links)
Les ceintures de radiation correspondent à la région de la magnétosphère dans laquelle se trouvent les particules de hautes énergies. Le couplage entre le vent solaire et la magnétosphère donne lieu à des variations des flux de particules sur plusieurs ordres de grandeurs. L’objectif de cette thèse est d’observer et caractériser ces variations de flux d’électrons au passage de différents types d’événements tels que les régions d’interaction en co-rotation (CIRs) et les éjections de masse coronale interplanétaires (ICMEs). Pour cela, nous avons traité et analysé les données de plusieurs types: paramètres du vent solaire, indices géomagnétiques et flux d’électrons dans les ceintures de radiation. Dans les trois premiers chapitres, nous rendons compte de la complexité de l’environnement spatial Terrestre et présentons les différentes données utilisées. Les travaux de thèse sont ensuite organisés en quatre chapitres. Premièrement, nous utilisons les mesures des satellites NOAA-POES afin de caractériser les flux d’électrons dans les ceintures. Nous étudions ensuite les différences de variations de flux causées par les CIRs et les ICMEs en fonction de l’énergie des électrons et du paramètre L*. Après avoir montré le fort lien entre les intensités d’orages magnétiques et les variations de flux, nous nous focalisons sur les ICMEs et la variabilité des orages qu’elles causent. Enfin, nous insistons sur l’importance des enchaînements d’événements. Après avoir quantifié la forte tendance qu’ont les ICMEs à former des séquences, nous réalisons une étude statistique sur les orages qu’elles causent, puis trois études de cas afin d’illustrer leurs effets sur les ceintures. / The radiation belts are the toroidal region within the inner magnetosphere where high energetic particles are located. The coupling between the solar wind and the magnetosphere leads to strong variations of particle fluxes that can therefore increase or decrease over several orders of magnitude. The aim of this thesis is to observe and characterize the variations of fluxes during the crossing of several types of events originating from the sun such as Corotating Interaction Regions (CIRs) and Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections (ICMEs). To do so, we processed and analyzed the data of various types : solar wind parameters, geomagnetic indices, and electron fluxes within the radiation belts. In the three first chapters, we report on the complexity of the Terrestrial space environment and we present the Solar-Terrestrial system and the data used. Then, our work is organized around four chapters. First, we characterized the electron fluxes within the radiation belts as measured by the NOAA-POES spacecrafts. Then, we studied the difference between the variations of fluxes caused by the CIRs and the ICMEs depending on the energy and the L* parameter. After establishing strong links between the intensity of magnetic storms and the variations of fluxes, we focused on the ICMEs and the variability of the related magnetic storms. Eventually, we emphasized the importance of the sequences of events. After quantifying the trend of the ICMEs to form sequences, we performed a statistical study on the magnetic storms caused by such sequences. Finally three study cases were performed in order to illustrate the various possible effects on the radiation belts.
2

Vývoj meziplanetárních koronárních výronů hmoty / Evolution of interplanetary coronal mass ejections

Lynnyk, Andrii January 2011 (has links)
Title: Evolution of Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections Author: Andrii Lynnyk Department: Department of Surface and Plasma Science Supervisor: RNDr. Marek Vandas, DrSc. e-mail address: vandas@ig.cas.cz Abstract: This thesis deals with deformation of the Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections (ICMEs) and their sub-class Magnetic Clouds (MCs) during their propagation in the Solar Wind (SW). The statistical study of the expanded MCs has shown that expansion greatly affects the MC internal magnetic field. We had shown that this influence is more clear for the MCs observed close to their axes. The study of the stand-off shock distance in front of the supersonic ICME confirms a smooth deformation of the ICMEs along their path from the Sun into interplanetary space. We observed that this deformation is increasing with the velocity of the ICME. This study also confirmed the difference in sheaths that are created in front of expanding and non-expanding ICMEs. We found that velocity distribution inside the MC is not uniform and it has large fluctuations. We found that the MC cross-section is usually strongly deformed. Keywords: interplanetary coronal mass ejection, magnetic cloud, magnetosheath, flux rope, magnetic field, shock, fitting

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