M. E. Wiedenbeck1, E. R. Christian2, C. M. S. Cohen3, A. C. Cummings3, R. A. Leske3, R. A. Mewaldt3, P. L. Slocum1, E. C. Stone3, and T. T. von Rosenvinge2 1 Jet Propulsion Laboratory 2 NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center 3 California Institute of Technology
Observations of a set of relatively large solar energetic particle (SEP) events over the past two years have shown that previous schemes for classifying SEP events are deficient. ACE is providing measurements of 3He content, heavy element abundances, charge state distributions, time-intensity profiles, and energy spectra over a broad range of energies in SEP events. From this wealth of detail it is evident that events are not confined to two distinct, mutually-exclusive categories: "gradual" events in which particles are thought to be accelerated by CME-driven interplanetary shocks and "impulsive" events in which acceleration is believed to occur at the site of a solar flare. In particular, a number of the larger events with gradual-event characteristics are found to have 3He/4He ratios well in excess of the solar wind value, which would suggest flare-associated acceleration. A recent proposal by Mason et al. (1999) attempts to explain these characteristics in terms of shock acceleration of a population of interplanetary ions that has been seeded with 3He by previous small impulsive events.
We report additional observations of the isotopic composition of
helium above ~5 MeV/nuc made using the ACE Solar Isotope
Spectrometer (SIS) in the larger SEP events the have occurred since the
ACE launch. We use these data to further characterize the properties
of "mixed"-type SEP events.
This research was supported by NASA at Caltech (under grant
NAG5-6912), JPL, and GSFC.