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Extreme Relativistic Electron Fluxes in GPS Orbit: Analysis of NS41 BDD-IIR Data
In this study, an extreme value analysis is condcuted of the daily average relativistic electron flux in GPS orbit as a function of position and energy using data from the US NS41 satellite from 10 December 2000 to 25 July 2020 |
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Abstract
Relativistic electrons in the Earth’s outer radiation belt are a significant space weather hazard. Satellites in GPS-type orbits pass through the heart of the outer radiation belt where they may be exposed to large fluxes of relativistic electrons. In this study we conduct an extreme value analysis of the daily average relativistic electron flux in Global Positioning System orbit as a function of energy and L using data from the US NS41 satellite from 10 December 2000 to 25 July 2020. The 1 in 10 year flux at L = 4.5, in the heart of the outer radiation belt, decreases with increasing energy
Plain language summary
Relativistic electrons in the Earth’s outer radiation belt are a significant space weather hazard. Global Navigation Satellite Systems such as the US Global Positioning System (GPS), the European Galileo navigation system, the Russian GLONASS system, and the Chinese Beidou system operate in medium Earth orbit at altitudes between 19,000 and 24,000 km. They all pass through the heart of the outer radiation belt where they may be exposed to large fluxes of relativistic electrons. In this study we conduct an extreme value analysis of the daily average relativistic electron flux in GPS orbit as a function of position and energy using data from the US NS41 satellite from 10 December 2000 to 25 July 2020. We determine the 1 in 10, 1 in 50 and 1 in 100 year relativistic electron flux levels as a function of position and energy. The 1 in N year relativistic electron fluxes determined here serve as benchmarks against which to compare other extreme space weather events and to help assess the potential impact of an extreme space weather event
Introduction
Modern society is increasingly reliant on satellites for a wide variety of applications including communication, navigation, Earth observation, and defense. For example, in 2021, the overall global space economy generated revenues of $386 billion, an increase of 4% compared to 2020 (Satellite Industry Association, 2022). This ever growing infrastructure is increasingly vulnerable to the potentially damaging effects of space weather (Krausmann, 2011). The concern at government level in the UK is such that severe space weather was added to the UK National Risk Register of Civil Emergencies in 2011, where the likelihood of the reasonable worst case scenario occurring in the next year is currently estimated to be between 1 in 20 and 1 in 100 (HM National Risk Register, 2020).
The impacts of space weather on satellite operations range from momentary interruptions of service to total loss of capabilities when a satellite fails. For example, during a major storm in 2003, 47 satellites experienced anomalies, more than 10 satellites were out of action for more than 1 day, and the joint US-Japanese US$640M Midori 2 environmental research satellite was a complete loss (Webb & Allen, 2004).
Relativistic electrons (E > 0.5 MeV) are a major source of radiation damage to satellites. These, so-called “killer” electrons can penetrate satellite surfaces and embed themselves in insulating materials and ungrounded conductors. Here, the charge can accumulate over time resulting in the build up of high electric fields which may eventually exceed breakdown levels (Frederickson et al., 1991; Rodgers & Ryden, 2001). The subsequent discharge can cause electric circuit upsets, damage components and, in exceptional cases, prove fatal for a satellite (e.g., Koons & Fennel, 2006). Indeed, significant correlations have been found between satellite anomalies and the fluxes of E > 2 MeV electrons (Iucci et al., 2005; Wrenn et al., 2002).
Relativistic electrons in near Earth space are generally confined to two distinct regions referred to as the inner and outer radiation belt. The inner radiation belt typically occurs at altitudes from 650 to 6,500 km in the Earth’s magnetic equatorial plane, and the outer radiation belt at altitudes from 13,000 to 40,000 km. The region in between is known as the slot region and is usually devoid of relativistic electrons. The inner belt is relatively stable with significant variations only occurring during the most intense geomagnetic storms (Baker et al., 2007). In contrast, the outer radiation belt is highly dynamic, especially during geomagnetic storms. Here the fluxes of relativistic electrons may change by orders of magnitude on timescales ranging from minutes to weeks (e.g., Baker et al., 1994; Blake et al., 1992). This variability is controlled by a variety of transport, acceleration and loss mechanisms (e.g., Li & Hudson, 2019; Shprits, Elkington, et al., 2008; Shprits, Subbotin, et al., 2008; Thorne, 2010), all of which become enhanced during enhanced geomagnetic activity. The location of the peak of the flux of relativistic electrons is also highly variable, typically lying at altitudes in the range 14,000– 28,000 km (Meredith et al., 2003).
Our critical infrastructure extends to 6.6 Earth radii, encompassing a region which includes the Earth’s inner radiation belt and the bulk of the outer radiation belt. As of 30 April 2022 there were 5,465 operational satellites in Earth orbit, including 4,700 in low Earth orbit (LEO), 140 in Medium Earth Orbit (MEO), 60 in elliptical orbits and 565 in geostationary orbit (GEO) (https://www.ucsusa.org/ resources/satellite-database). Most are exposed to relativistic electrons at some or all points in their orbits. Satellites in MEO are exposed to relativistic electrons from the outer edge to the heart of the outer radiation belt while satellites in GEO are exposed to relativistic electrons toward the edge of the outer radiation belt. Satellites in LEO are exposed to relativistic electrons in the inner radiation belt and, for those in high inclination LEO orbits, also to relativistic electrons at high magnetic latitudes where they cross field lines which are connected to the outer radiation belt.
Satellite operators and engineers require realistic estimates of the highest fluxes that are likely to be encountered in a particular satellite orbit to assess the impact extreme events on the satellite fleet and to improve resilience of future satellites by better design of satellite components if required. Satellite insurers also require this information to ensure satellite operators are doing all they can to reduce risk and to help them evaluate realistic disaster scenarios. Previous studies have determined the 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 year event for relativistic electrons in GEO using data from the Energetic Particle Sensors on board the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) GOES satellites (Meredith et al., 2015) and High Earth orbit (HEO) using data from the Radiation Environment Monitor (IREM) on board European Space Agency (ESA’s) INTEGRAL spacecraft (Meredith et al., 2017), for energetic electrons in LEO using data from the Medium Energy Proton and Electron Detectors on board the NOAA POES satellites (Meredith et al., 2016a) and for internal charging currents in MEO using data from the SURF instrument on board ESA’s Giove-A satellite (Meredith et al., 2016b). The results from these studies have been used in the development of space weather reasonable worst case scenarios for the UK National Risk Assessment (Hapgood et al., 2021). Furthermore, the 1 in 100 year relativistic electron fluxes from GEO and HEO were included in the US Space Weather Phase 1 Benchmarks report (US Space Weather Phase 1 Benchmarks, 2018).
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) such as the US Global Positioning System (GPS), the European Galileo navigation system, the Russian GLONASS system, and the Chinese Beidou system operate in MEO at altitudes between 19,000 and 24,000 km. They all thus pass through the heart of the outer radiation belt where they may be exposed to large fluxes of relativistic electrons. GNSS-enabled devices are used ubiquitously all over the world for navigation, positioning, tracking, mapping and timing. For example, in 2021 there were 6.5 billion GNSS devices in use and this is expected to rise to 10.3 billion by 2031 (EUSPA EO & GNSS Market Report, 2022). In 2021 the global downstream market revenue from both GNSS-enabled devices and services was 199 billion Euros and this is expected to grow to 492 billion Euros by 2031, largely fueled by expected revenues from added value services (EUSPA EO & GNSS Market Report, 2022). It is therefore important to have a comprehensive understanding of the environment encountered by satellites in GNSS-type orbits and, in particular, knowledge of the likely extremes of this environment to be able to better protect space assets operating in this region.
In this study we use approximately 20 years of data from the US GPS NS41 satellite to determine the 1 in 10, 1 in 50, and 1 in 100 year space weather event for relativistic electrons in GPS orbit as a function of energy and L. We first sorted the data by satellite location and calculated the daily average fluxes as a function of energy, L and time. We then computed probability distributions as a function of energy and L. We then conducted extreme value analyses to determine the 1 in 10, 1 in 50, and 1 in 100 year flux as a function of energy and L. The instrumentation and data analysis are described in Section 2 and the probability distributions are presented in Section 3. The extreme value analysis technique is described in Section 4 and the results are presented in Section 5. Finally, the results are discussed and the conclusions presented in Sections 6 and 7 respectively.
Instrumentation and data analysis
Instrumentation
The data used in this study were collected by the Burst Detector Dosimeter IIR (BDD-IIR) on board the US GPS satellite NS41. NS41 was launched on 10 November 2000 and operated in a circular orbit at an altitude of 20,200 km with an inclination of 55° and a period of 12 hr. It crossed the magnetic equator around L = 4.2 and sampled higher L shells at higher magnetic latitudes. For this study we use data from the entire mission, extending from 10 December 2000 to 25 July 2020.
BDD-IIR is a multi purpose silicon detector system. It features 8 individual channels of a “shield/filter/sensor” design that permits the detector to sample roughly half the celestial sphere while at the same time shielding the silicon sensor elements from most of the incident particle flux. Absorbers in front of the sensors determine the energy thresholds for measuring the incident particle fluxes. The aperture dimensions were chosen in an attempt to achieve equal counting rates in all channels. During on-orbit operation none of the BDD-IIR’s channels appeared to saturate. Background counting rates were found to be well behaved. For each week of data mean values of the counting rates of the 8 channels were compiled from accumulations reported from L values larger than 20. Except for weeks with one or more solar energetic particle (SEP) events, the weekly mean values were used for the background counting rates for each of the 2,520 individual records. During SEPs, the background estimation followed the evolution of the SEP and were time dependent.
The deposited energy thresholds were calibrated carefully (Cayton et al., 1998). Electron response functions for the channels were determined by detailed modeling of the instrument by Monte Carlo methods (Tuszewski et al., 2002). The version of the channel response functions used to compute the fluxes studied here were determined from Monte Carlo simulations that exposed the entire BDD-IIR instrument to isotropic fluxes of mono-energetic electrons (Cayton et al., 2010). These response functions correspond to incident electrons in the energy range 0.1–10 MeV, and involve no scaling factors.
The electron response functions are most sensitive to the highest energy incident electrons. Any electron spectrum covering the energy range from 0.1 to 10 MeV can be folded with the response functions to predict counting rates in all eight channels due to that spectrum. Adding background counting rates to these yields a set of model counting rate that may be compared directly with the measured rates (corrected for the measured 6 ms dead-time). Best-fitting relativistic-Maxwellian spectra were determined by minimizing the sum of squared differences of a set of model counting rates (background plus ones due the spectrum of electrons) and the set of dead-time corrected measured counting rates. Least-squares fitting was attempted only when three or more of the observed (and corrected) rates exceeded the mean background counting rates by more than 3 standard deviations. Each of the best-fitting spectra covers the energy range 0.1–10 MeV. Commonly observed spectral features (i.e., remarkably exponential shapes) of relativistic electrons in the outer radiation belt (Cayton et al., 1989; Pierrard & Lemaire, 1996; Reagan et al., 1981) provided guidance for the selection of the relativistic Maxwellian as the functional form for these model spectra.
For energies greater than 0.5 MeV, electron fluxes computed from this set of response functions compared very well with pitch-angle resolved ones mapped up B-field lines to NS41 from the Synchronous Orbit Particle Analyzer (SOPA, Version 3) aboard S/C LANL- 97A during calendar year 2005; below 0.5 MeV the single-component spectra from BDD-IIR consistently underestimated those mapped from geostationary orbit: an additional spectral component is needed to adequately represent the energetic electron population in the energy range 0.1–0.5 MeV. The standard “space-weather data” used here model the electron spectrum as a single component; we therefore restrict attention to the relativistic electron population with energies greater than 0.5 MeV.
Single relativistic-Maxwellian fits of the BDD-IIR observations at high magnetic latitude contributed to a density and temperature description of energetic electrons in the Earth’s magnetotail (Denton & Cayton, 2011). Using instrument specific response functions evaluated for incident electrons in the energy range 0.1–10 MeV, that involve no scaling factors, the procedure described above yielded consistent spectra for NS41 and 11 other GPS spacecraft during the 5-year interval January 2006 through November 2010: NS48 (BDD-IIRM), and NS53– NS62 (Combined X-ray and Dosimeter). Data from BDD-IIR have been extensively used in the DREAM model (Koller et al., 2007; Reeves et al., 2012), to calculate expected solar array degradation (Messenger et al., 2011) and to characterize relativistic electron flux rise times (Varotsou et al., 2008).
Data Analysis
The NS41 BDD-IIR data used in this study were downloaded from the United States Department of Commerce’s NOAA website. Each normal file includes 2,520 records of duration 240 s, corresponding to one GPS-week of data. Each weekly file was examined, and excess records (almost always contained only “fill” values) were eliminated. Of the total of 1024 GPSweeks during the lifetime of the mission, 31 were missing entirely, 3 included data for 1 day and 1 included data for two days. We used the data from the remaining 989 full weekly files in this study.
Electron phase space densities at 10 5.0, 6.0, and 8.0 MeV) were written into specific separate files for each crossing of 12 specific L-shell values (4.25, 4.50, 4.75, energies (0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.6, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, separate files for each crossing of 12 5.00, 5.25, 5.50, 5.75, 6.00, 6.25, 6.50, 6.75, and 7.00). Here L is the McIlwain L value calculated using the International Geomagnetic Reference Field internal field and the Olson-Pfitzer quiet-time external field (Olson & Pfitzer, 1977). NS41 crosses each of the specified L-shells as many as 8 times each day. The phase space densities were then plotted as a function of time for each energy and L value to verify the absence of outliers and other peculiarities in the data. Electron differential fluxes were then calculated from these phase space densities by multiplying each by the corresponding energy factor (0.95225, 1.4262, 1.9785, 4.1049, 5.9139, 11.806, 19.656, 29.462, 41.225, and 70.622). Daily averaged fluxes were then compiled for each of the specified L-shells.
An example monthly summary plot of the daily average electron flux in the heart of the outer radiation belt at L = 4.5, is shown in Figure 1 for April 2010. To put the data into context the figure also shows relevant geophysical indices and solar wind parameters. Figure 1 shows (a–f) the electron flux at E = 8.0, 6.0, 4.0, 2.0, 1.0, and 0.6 MeV, respectively; (g) the solar wind speed (red trace) and Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) Bz (black trace); (h) the Dst index (color coded) and solar wind pressure (black trace); and (i) the Kp (color coded) and AE (black coded) indices . The dotted lines in panels a–f represent the 1% exceedance level at each respective energy. The 1% exceedance level is exceeded for a number of days at each energy, with the peak values at each energy being the largest fluxes at that energy observed during the entire mission. These large fluxes are associated with several days of enhanced geomagnetic activity followed by a moderate geomagnetic storm that began on 5 April 2010.
To examine the behavior of the fluxes on a longer timescale we also plotted the electron fluxes for each year as a function of time for each energy and L value. Figure 2 shows one such summary plot of the daily average electron flux at L = 4.5 for 2010, in a similar format to Figure 1. At each energy the fluxes are characterized by relatively rapid increases followed by gradual decays lasting many days. The figure shows that in 2010 the 1% exceedance level was only exceeded during the April geomagnetic storm, although several other flux increases approached the 1% levels.
Statistics
The top 10 daily average fluxes of E = 1.0, E = 2.0, and E = 4.0 MeV electrons at L = 4.5, representative of the heart of the outer radiation belt, and L = 6.5 at higher magnetic latitudes on field lines that map to geostationary orbit, are tabulated in Tables 1 and 2 respectively. The largest
Extreme value analysis
The main objective of this study is to determine the 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 year daily average electron flux for the specified energies and L shells. Since daily averages are available and to compare with our previous studies (Meredith et a l., 2015, 2016a, 2016b, 2017), we use the exceedances over a high threshold approach (Dey & Das, 2016; Thomson et al., 2011). For this approach, also known as the Peaks Over Threshold method, the appropriate distribution function is the generalized Pareto distribution (GPD), first introduced by Picklands (1975). This model assumes that the underlying physics is similar during extreme events. For example, it assumes that an extremely rare event doesn’t occur with a completely different set of characteristics, not seen before. This assumption is likely to be valid for the outer radiation belt studied here, but would not necessarily hold for the inner radiation belt (e.g., Shprits et al., 2011). This approach has been used successfully in many fields to estimate, for example, extremes of rainfall (e.g., Li et al., 2005), surface temperature (e.g., Nogaj et al., 2006), geomagnetic storm events (Tsubouchi & Omura, 2007), wind speed (e.g., Della-Marta et al., 2009), geomagnetic activity (Thomson et al., 2011), storm surge (e.g., Tebaldi et al., 2012), hurricane damage (Dey & Das, 2016), and the probability of Carrington-like solar flares (Elvidge & Angling, 2018).
The threshold at each energy and L should be low enough to include a meaningful number of data points and high enough to capture the behavior of the tail of the distribution. Based on experience analyzing other satellite data sets (e.g., Meredith et al., 2015, 2017), for each energy and L we set the threshold at the 1% exceedance level. We declustered the data by assuming a cluster to be active until three consecutive daily average values fell below the chosen threshold. We then fit the GPD (Coles, 2001; Picklands, 1975) to the cluster maxima for each specified energy and L shell using the ismev library routine gpd.fit provided in the R statistical package (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, 2008). The GPD may be written as:
Results
Discussion
Some of the largest daily average fluxes encountered during the entire mission were observed during the 6 April 2010
The largest internal charging currents observed by the top, middle and bottom plates of the SURF instrument on Giove-A between December 2005 and January 2016 also occurred during this event, both at L* = 4.75 near the heart of the outer radiation belt and at L* = 6.0 on field lines that map out close to geostationary orbit (Meredith et al., 2016b). This suggests that the largest observed internal charging currents recorded by each of the SURF plates in these two locations are rarer than would be expected based on the original statistics, with, for example, the empirical return period being of the order of 20 years as opposed to 8.5 years estimated in the original study.
In this study we have focused on the 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 year daily average relativistic electron fluxes as a function of energy and L. However, the duration of the enhanced fluxes associated with the largest events are also important, since charge deposited on insulators and ungrounded conductors builds up over time. Figure 9 shows the average time the flux exceeds the 1% exceedance level for each of the cluster maxima for each energy (color-coded) as a function of L. At L = 4.5 the average event duration increases with increasing energy from 2.5 days at 0.6 MeV to 4.4 days at the highest energies. The same trend is seen at larger L, for example, L = 6.5, but the average duration is smaller ranging from 1.4 days at E = 0.6 MeV to 2.5 days at E = 8.0 MeV. Although we are not fitting decay timescales the data indicate that, over the range of energies and L sampled, the timescale for loss is generally smaller at lower energies and higher L.
energies and high L the shape parameter is robustly positive, suggesting the fluxes are unbounded at high energy and high L.
It is hard to understand why the fluxes at the higher energies and high L, for example, E > 3 MeV at L = 6.5, have no upper bound when the plots of the 1 in N year fluxes are so smooth and the 1 in N year flux levels at the higher energies are orders of magnitude lower than the corresponding flux levels at 0.6 MeV, which are bounded. One possibility is that fluxes approaching the limiting value are extremely rare at higher energy and L, highlighting the inherent difficulty in using 20 years of data to infer the presence or absence of an upper limit which may typically not be reached for 100 years or more. Another possible reason for the difference is that the instrument samples higher L shells at higher magnetic latitudes and there could be some variation in anisotropy that is not captured at higher energy and L.
It is interesting to note that when the fluxes tend to limiting values the 1 in 100 year flux or, indeed, the limiting flux is not significantly larger than the 1 in 10 year flux. For example, at L = 4.5 the limiting flux is between 1.1 and 1.3 times larger than the 1 in 10 year flux. This is not the case when the fluxes are unbounded and the differences between the 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 year fluxes are much greater. For example, at L = 6.5 the 1 in 100 year fluxes of E = 4.0 and E = 6.0 MeV electrons are factors of 3.6 and 5.9 times higher than the corresponding 1 in 10 year events. A major consequence of this type of behavior is that there are a much larger number of occurrences of fluxes approaching the 1 in 100 year flux for the bounded compared to unbounded cases. This is demonstrated in Table 4 where we tabulate the number of times the daily average flux is within a factor of two of the corresponding 1 in 100 year flux. In the table the bounded cases are printed in bold, the undetermined case in italic and the unbounded cases in normal font. At L = 4.5, where the daily average E = 1.0 MeV fluxes are bounded, the daily average E = 1.0 MeV flux lies within a factor of two of the 1 in 100 year flux on 126 days. Further out, at L = 6.5, where the corresponding fluxes are unbounded, the daily average E = 1.0 MeV flux lies within a factor of two of the 1 in 100 year flux on only 12 days. Thus, the behavior of the tail of the distribution is important when not only determining the 1 in 100 year flux but also in determining the number of times the fluxes approach within a given factor of the 1 in 100 year flux.
It is informative to compare the results of our study with the IRENE AE9 radiation environment model (Johnston et al., 2014; O’Brien et al., 2018). Figure 10a shows a comparison between the 99th percentile of the BDD-IIR fluxes at L = 4.25 as a function of energy (red trace and symbols) with the 99th percentile of version 1.5 of the IRENE AE9 radiation environment model for equatorial MEO orbit at 20,200 km (black trace and symbols). The results are largely in extremely good agreement both in magnitude and spectral shape for a wide range of energies from 0.6 to 6.0 MeV. This also gives us confidence in the measured fluxes at higher energies, in particular, up to 6.0 MeV. A significant departure is seen at E = 8.0 MeV with the 99th percentile of the AE9 model being a factor of 8 times greater than the 99th percentile of the BDD-IIR fluxes. The fact that the observed fluxes are less than those in AE9 at E = 8.0 MeV suggests that the issue is not associated with background counting issues in the BDD-IIR. It could be due to background counting issues in the data used to determine the AE9 model, especially given the fact that the gradient in the AE9 fluxes becomes less steep around 6.0 MeV. Alternatively, it could be due to the methods used to fit the data. Determining the reason warrants further investigation but is beyond the scope of the present study.
One of the largest geomagnetic storms of the last 20 years was the Halloween storm in 2003, with a Dst minimum of −383 nT on 30th October at 22:00 UT. Following the storm a new outer radiation belt formed at low L, peaking in the slot region inside L = 3.0 (Baker et al., 2004; Horne et al., 2005). This event is not associated with large fluxes of relativistic electrons as observed by NS41, either toward the edge of the outer radiation belt or in the usual position of the heart of the radiation belt. This event serves to show that the 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 year fluxes in MEO and GEO are not related to the most extreme storms as monitored by the Dst index. This is consistent with Horne et al. (2018) who found that satellites at GEO are more likely to be at risk from a fast solar wind stream event than from a major storm. In such storms the outer radiation belt often reforms inside MEO and is depleted at higher L values. Relativistic electrons during this type of extreme storm would not pose a risk to satellites in MEO or GEO. However, the situation would be different for satellites in the slot region, such as the O3B satellites. The slot region is usually devoid of relativistic electrons but, during such severe storms, can become elevated and remain elevated for weeks or even months (Baker et al., 2007), significantly increasing the risk to satellites operating in this region.
Conclusions
We have conducted an extreme value analysis of the relativistic electron flux in GPS orbit as a function of energy and L using data from the BDD-IIR instrument on the US NS41 satellite. Our principal results are as follows:
The 1 in N year electron fluxes determined here as a function of energy and L can serve as benchmarks against which to compare other extreme space weather events and to help assess the potential impact of an extreme event.
Data availability statement
The data used in this study is publicly available from http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/ stp/space-weather/satellite-data/satellite-sytems/gps/data/ns41. The solar wind data, geomagnetic activity indices and sunspot numbers are available from the NASA GSFC OMNI website (https:// omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/). The results and data shown in this study can be downloaded from the UK Polar Data Centre (https://doi. org/10.5285/30bba6e1- de1e-4ef9-97a6-d64e9eaca820).
Acknowledgments
We would like to acknowledge the skill and attention to detail of Timothy J. Wehner that enabled these measurements at Medium Earth Orbit. We acknowledge Los Alamos National Laboratory for generating the BDD-IIR data products used in this study, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s archive of the data files themselves.
The research leading to these results has received funding from the Natural Environment Research Council Grants NE/V00249X/1 (Sat-Risk) and NE/ R016038/1. to satellites in MEO or GEO. However, the situation would be different for satellites in the slot region, such as the O3B satellites. The slot region is usually devoid of relativistic electrons but, during such severe storms, can become elevated and remain elevated for weeks or even months (Baker et al., 2007), significantly increasing the risk to satellites operating in this region.
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