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Solar-Terrestrial Physics: The Study of Mankind's Newest Frontier
Solar-Terrestrial Physics (STP) has been around for 100 years.
However, it only became known as a scientific discipline under that
name when the physical domain studied by STP became accessible to
in situ observation and measurement by man or man-made instruments.
Indeed, it was STP that provided the initial scientific driving
force for the launching of man-made devices into extra-terrestrial
space during the International Geophysical Year - aided of course
by the genetically engrained drive of humans to expand their
frontiers of knowledge, influence and dominance. We may define STP
as the discipline dealing with the variable components of solar
corpuscular and electromagnetic emissions, the physical processes
governing their sources and their propagation through
interplanetary space, and the physical-chemical processes related
to their interaction with the Earth and other bodies in
interplanetary space. Much of STP deals with fully-or
partially-ionized gas flows and related energy, momentum and mass
transfer in what now appears as one single system made up of
distinct but strongly interacting parts, reaching from the
photosphere out to the confines of the heliopause, engulfing
planets and other solar system bodies, and dipping deep into 6 the
Earth's atmosphere.
Since the discovery of geomagnetically trapped radiation by Van
Allen in 1958, an impressive amount of experimental information on
the earth's particle and field environment has nourished research
work for scores of scientists and thesis work for their students.
This quest has challenged space-age technology to produce better
and more sophisticated instru ments and has challenged the
international scientific community and governments to establish
more, and more effective, cooperative programs of research and
information exchange. As a result, an orderly picture of the
principal physical mechanisms governing the earth's radiation
environment is beginning to emerge. The interest in this topic has
reached far beyond the domain of geo physics. Indeed, we find
trapped radiation elsewhere in the universe: Jupiter's radiation
belts, particle trapping in sunspot magnetic fields, cosmic rays
confined in interstellar fields and, possibly, ultra-high-energy
particles trapped in the magnetic fields of rotating neutron stars.
There is abundant technical and scientific literature available on
Van Allen radiation; comprehensive reviews are published regularly
in journals* or have been collected in book form**, and books have
been written on the subject***. The aim of this monograph is to
complement the existing literature with a concise discussion of the
basic dynamical processes that control the earth's radiation belts.
It is mainly intended to help a graduate student or a researcher
new to this field to understand the underlying physics and to
provide him with guidelines for quantita tive, numerical
applications of the theory."
Solar-Terrestrial Physics: The Study of Mankind's Newest Frontier
Solar-Terrestrial Physics (STP) has been around for 100 years.
However, it only became known as a scientific discipline under that
name when the physical domain studied by STP became accessible to
in situ observation and measurement by man or man-made instruments.
Indeed, it was STP that provided the initial scientific driving
force for the launching of man-made devices into extra-terrestrial
space during the International Geophysical Year - aided of course
by the genetically engrained drive of humans to expand their
frontiers of knowledge, influence and dominance. We may define STP
as the discipline dealing with the variable components of solar
corpuscular and electromagnetic emissions, the physical processes
governing their sources and their propagation through
interplanetary space, and the physical-chemical processes related
to their interaction with the Earth and other bodies in
interplanetary space. Much of STP deals with fully-or
partially-ionized gas flows and related energy, momentum and mass
transfer in what now appears as one single system made up of
distinct but strongly interacting parts, reaching from the
photosphere out to the confines of the heliopause, engulfing
planets and other solar system bodies, and dipping deep into 6 the
Earth's atmosphere.
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