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Creators/Authors contains: "Blum, Lauren W"

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  1. Ultra Low Frequency (ULF) waves with periods of 10–1,000 s can lead to space weather impacts such as induced electrical currents in power grids, thus it is important to understand the factors controlling wave dynamics. This is challenging, however, as waves (1) are affected by multiple factors simultaneously, (2) are non-stationary which in some cases precludes use of identification methods that assume stationarity, (3) can occur in superposition with each other making them difficult to separate and identify. Past studies have addressed these challenges through combined audiovisual analysis tools to identify complex but recurring patterns in ULF wave activity that eluded standard visual inspection and automated detection algorithms, as well as through crowd-sourced wave identification. The “Heliophysics Audified: Resonances in Plasmas” NASA citizen science project follows these studies by deploying a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for crowd-sourced ULF wave identification to a large online audience before and during the Heliophysics Big Year (HBY). In this study, we discuss the initial development, beta testing, and deployment of the GUI in April 2023. We further discuss the key initial scientific findings of the HARP project, in particular the discovery by volunteers of anomalous standing Alfvén wave activity with frequency increasing with distance from the Earth. Finally, we discuss participant impacts and lessons learned, as well broader impacts beyond the scope of the original project such as collaborations with museums and musicians. We place these results in context with previous work and discuss implications for future studies. 
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  2. Abstract The Earth’s radiation belts are maintained by a number of acceleration, loss and transport mechanisms, and the electron fluxes at any given time are highly variable. Microbursts, which are rapid (sub-second) bursts of energetic electrons entering the atmosphere from the magnetosphere, are one of the key loss mechanisms controlling radiation belt fluxes. Such rapid bursts are typically observed from the outer radiation belt and driven by interactions with whistler mode chorus waves, but they can also occur in the inner belt and slot region, driven by lightning-generated whistlers. This lightning-induced electron precipitation is typically observed at 10s–100s keV, but here we present direct observations of this phenomenon at MeV energies. This unveils a coupling between near-Earth processes, such as lightning, and radiation belt processes, such as relativistic electron microbursts, bridging the gap between Earth weather and space weather. 
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  3. Many spacecraft fly within or through a natural and variable particle accelerator powered by the coupling between the magnetosphere and the solar wind: the Earth’s radiation belts. Determining the dominant pathways to plasma energization is a central challenge for radiation belt science and space weather alike. Inward radial transport from an external source was originally thought to be the most important acceleration process occurring in the radiation belts. Yet, when modeling relied on a radial diffusion equation including electron lifetimes, notable discrepancies in model-observation comparisons highlighted a need for improvement. Works by Professor Richard M. Thorne and others showed that energetic (hundreds of keV) electrons interacting with whistler-mode chorus waves could be efficiently accelerated to very high energies. The same principles were soon transposed to understand radiation belt dynamics at Jupiter and Saturn. These results led to a paradigm shift in our understanding of radiation belt acceleration, supported by observations of a growing peak in the radial profile of the phase space density for the most energetic electrons of the Earth’s outer belt. Yet, quantifying the importance of local acceleration at the gyroscale, versus large-scale acceleration associated with radial transport, remains controversial due to various sources of uncertainty. The objective of this review is to provide context to understand the variety of challenges associated with differentiating between the two main radiation belt acceleration processes: radial transport and local acceleration. Challenges range from electron flux measurement analysis to radiation belt modeling based on a three-dimensional Fokker-Planck equation. We also provide recommendations to inform future research on radiation belt radial transport and local acceleration. 
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