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Vatic Note:  Somehow I feel that this is connected to so much in the plasma universe and especially with respect to our earth and to our own bodies.  Its a rabbithole I intended to go down, but got distracted with other more pressing emerging issues.  So bear with me.  I wonder what affect this has on the resonating issue of the earth and ourselves if any.   It would be nice if we can find out some info on the matter. 
Cluster Data Shows Intriguing Links Between Plasmasphere And Van Allen Belts 
http://beforeitsnews.com/space/2013/09/cluster-data-shows-intriguing-links-between-plasmasphere-and-van-allen-belts-2465776.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=51sKwUSFpbo
For more than half a century, the invisible bubble created by Earth’s magnetic field – the magnetosphere  – has been studied by space missions. The discovery of Earth’s  radiation belts in 1958 was one of the first scientific breakthroughs  made by a spacecraft. The Explorer 1 satellite revealed two concentric,  tire-shaped belts of highly energetic (0.1–10 MeV) electrons and  protons, which are trapped by the magnetic field and travel around the  Earth.
Typically between 3700 and 7500 miles (1 – 2 Earth radii [RE]) above Earth’s surface, the inner Van Allen belt  sometimes dips much closer over the South Atlantic Ocean. The altitudes  of the outer belt ranges from 15,500 to 30,000 miles (4 to 7 RE). The  outer belt is much more dynamic than the inner belt because it is  readily affected by solar outbursts that impact the magnetosphere.  During the solar outbursts, the outer belt’s density can vary by several  orders of magnitude.
An empty “slot” region separates the belts from one another. NASA’s Van Allen Probes detected a third, temporary belt between the slot and the outer main belt earlier this year.
The plasmasphere  is a donut shaped region of low energy charged particles that  co-rotates with Earth. The Van Allen belts partly overlap this region,  where the cold plasma plays a crucial role in governing the dynamics of  Earth’s radiation belts. The plasmasphere determines the growth and  propagation of Very Low Frequency (VLF) radio waves, which are  responsible for the energization of the Van Allen radiation belts and  particle loss in the belts through wave-particle interaction.
These two overlapping regions of near-Earth space have been studied  in different ways by many spacecraft. The types of instruments flown and  the satellites’ orbits have hampered attempts to identify and explain  the mechanisms of the interactions. Scientists continually investigate  the complex relationship between the plasmasphere and the radiation belt  boundaries and much remains to be discovered.
Fabien Darrouzet, a researcher at the Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy  in Brussels, led a team of physicists who have made an important new  contribution to the search for answers. The team based their findings on  data retrieved from one of the quartet of Cluster spacecraft, which have been flying in formation around the Earth since 2000. The findings of this study were published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.
The Cluster quartet penetrated deep inside the plasmasphere and the  radiation belts, with a lowest orbital point of 2 RE, from April 1,  2007, to March 31, 2009. The team analyzed populations of electrons of  different energies during this rare window using three of the  instruments on board the Cluster satellite C3.
“We wanted to study the boundaries of the two regions – the  plasmasphere and the radiation belts – with instruments on board the  same satellite,” explains Darrouzet. “Very precise complementary data  could be collected at the same time and in the same place by using three  different instruments on a single Cluster spacecraft.”
By analyzing background data from the CIS instrument, which is  sensitive to electrons with energy > 2 MeV, the team was able to  deduce the positions of the outer belt’s boundaries. They obtained the  position of the plasmapause (the edge of the plasmasphere) using the  WHISPER instrument, which is able to determine the electron density  inside and outside the plasmasphere. The team then refined their results  by comparing them to data from the RAPID instrument, which determined  the locations of the radiation belts’ boundaries by detecting high  energy electrons between 244 and 406 keV.
Over the two year period of observation, which happened to coincide  with a period of low solar activity and generally quiet geomagnetic  conditions, the team obtained several hundred data sets. The analysis of  the Cluster C3 data revealed more variety in the position of the outer  edge of the plasmasphere – the plasmapause – than in the position of the  furthest boundary of the outer radiation belt.
The researchers found that for long periods of low geomagnetic  activity, the plasmapause was located toward the farthest reaches of the  outer belt – typically around 6 RE, but sometimes expanding outward to 8  RE or beyond.
Previous studies based on other spacecraft observations  indicated a correlation between the position of the inner edge of the  outer belt and the position of the plasmapause. indicated a correlation  between the position of the inner edge of the outer belt and the  position of the plasmapause., in contrast, indicated a correlation  between the position of the inner edge of the outer belt and the  position of the plasmapause.
Indications of different behaviors were present, however, during the  occasional periods of higher geomagnetic activity. During these periods,  the plasmapause moved closer to the inner boundary of the outer  radiation belt, at around 4.5 RE, as observed by previous studies.
The plasmasphere was more easily filled by material from the  underlying ionosphere – Earth’s highest atmospheric layer- during  periods of low geomagnetic activity. However, during the geomagnetic storms the plasmasphere diameter was reduced and it moved closer to Earth.
The slot region thickness was also found to follow the variations in  geomagnetic activity. After activity decreased and the plasmasphere  expanded, causing the slot region to widen, particle loss in the  radiation belts increased.
“Having studied the plasmasphere and radiation belts during solar  minimum, we are now intending to use Cluster data to study the links  between both regions during periods of higher geomagnetic activity,”  said Darrouzet. “We would also like to study the wave-particle  interactions in those two regions and learn more about how they  influence the distribution of the particles when solar maximum occurs.”
“The presence of the radiation belts is a key factor in the design of  all spacecraft in low Earth orbit, as well as a natural hazard for  astronauts,” commented Philippe Escoubet,  ESA Project Scientist for Cluster. “Forecasting the dynamics of the  belts is one of our prime objectives, but this is only achievable by  understanding the underlying physics.”
“The Cluster mission offers the rare opportunity to analyze different  regions of the inner magnetosphere with identical sensors on multiple  spacecraft,” he adds. “With the launch of NASA’s Van Allen Probes in  2012, we look forward to an even more productive period of complementary  scientific studies of near-Earth space.”
Image 2 (below): How geomagnetic conditions change the  relative locations of the outer boundary of the Earth’s plasmasphere  (the plasmapause) and the Van Allen belts. 
Credit: ESA/C. Carreau [ More Information ] 
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