Intercomparison of the POES/MEPED Loss Cone Electron Fluxes With the CMIP6 Parametrization
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 16:03 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The Ap parametrization in CMIP6 underestimates medium energy electron precipitation fluxes during strong geomagnetic storms.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The Ap model falls short in respect to reproducing the flux level and variability associated with strong geomagnetic storms (Ap > 40) as well as the duration of corotating interaction region storms causing a systematic bias within a solar cycle. As the Ap-parameterized fluxes reach a plateau for Ap > 40, the model's ability to reflect the flux level of previous solar cycles associated with generally higher Ap values is questioned.
What carries the argument
Loss-cone flux estimates obtained by combining the 0° and 90° MEPED electron detectors with electron pitch-angle distributions taken from wave-particle interaction theory.
If this is right
- The CMIP6 particle energy input carries a systematic underestimate during strong storms.
- Atmospheric models driven by the Ap parametrization will understate energy deposition and chemical effects from medium energy electrons.
- A solar-cycle bias arises because the model does not capture the full length of corotating interaction region storms.
- The plateau at Ap > 40 limits the parametrization's usefulness for earlier solar cycles that experienced higher Ap values.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Revised parametrizations for particle precipitation in climate models could be tested against loss-cone estimates from combined-detector data.
- The identified shortfall may affect calculations of NOx production and ozone response that rely on CMIP6 solar forcing.
Load-bearing premise
Electron pitch angle distributions from wave-particle interaction theory, when combined with the two MEPED detectors, give an accurate estimate of the true loss-cone precipitating flux.
What would settle it
Independent measurements of precipitating electron fluxes during an Ap > 40 geomagnetic storm that match the lower levels given by the Ap model rather than the higher loss-cone estimates.
Figures
read the original abstract
Quantitative measurements of medium energy electron (MEE) precipitation ($>$40 keV) are a key to understand the total effect of particle precipitation on the atmosphere. The Medium Energy Proton and Electron Detector (MEPED) instrument on board the NOAA/Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites (POES) has two sets of electron telescopes pointing $\sim$0$^{\circ}$ and $\sim$90$^{\circ}$ to the local vertical. Pitch angle anisotropy, which varies with particle energy, location, and geomagnetic activity, makes the 0$^{\circ}$ detector measurements a lower estimate of the flux of precipitating electrons. In the solar forcing recommended for Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) 6 (v3.2) MEE precipitation is parameterized by Ap based on 0$^{\circ}$ detector measurements hence providing a general underestimate of the flux level. In order to assess the accuracy of the Ap model, we compare the modeled electron fluxes with estimates of the loss cone fluxes using both detectors in combination with electron pitch angle distributions from theory of wave-particle interactions. The Ap model falls short in respect to reproducing the flux level and variability associated with strong geomagnetic storms (Ap $>$ 40) as well as the duration of corotating interaction region storms causing a systematic bias within a solar cycle. As the Ap-parameterized fluxes reach a plateau for Ap $>$ 40, the model's ability to reflect the flux level of previous solar cycles associated with generally higher Ap values is questioned. The objective of this comparison is to understand the potential uncertainty in the energetic particle precipitation applying the CMIP6 particle energy input in order to assess its subsequent impact on the atmosphere.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript intercompares loss-cone medium-energy electron fluxes reconstructed from POES/MEPED 0° and 90° telescope counts using theoretical pitch-angle distributions against the Ap-based parametrization adopted for CMIP6 (v3.2). It concludes that the Ap model underestimates both the flux level and variability for Ap > 40 and introduces a systematic bias in the duration of corotating interaction region (CIR) storms, with implications for atmospheric forcing over a solar cycle.
Significance. If the reconstructed fluxes are shown to be robust, the result would identify a concrete limitation in the CMIP6 solar-particle forcing that affects atmospheric chemistry and dynamics simulations during strong geomagnetic activity. The work performs an external comparison against independent satellite measurements rather than deriving results by internal fitting, which is a methodological strength.
major comments (2)
- [Methods] Methods section (loss-cone flux estimation): the reconstruction combines the two MEPED detectors with pitch-angle distributions taken from quasi-linear theory of chorus/EMIC scattering, yet no cross-validation against independent datasets (FIREBIRD, BARREL, or Van Allen Probes) or test-particle simulations is reported for the Ap > 40 or slot-region events. Because the central claim attributes all reported discrepancies to the Ap parametrization, this unverified assumption is load-bearing.
- [Results] Results (Ap > 40 regime): the claim that the Ap model reaches a plateau and therefore underestimates fluxes during strong storms rests on the accuracy of the theoretical-PAD reconstruction; without demonstrated robustness of that reconstruction under the same conditions, the reported bias cannot be unambiguously assigned to the CMIP6 parametrization.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that the Ap model 'falls short in respect to reproducing the flux level and variability' would be strengthened by an explicit reference to the figure or table that quantifies the underestimation factor.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments on the validation of the loss-cone flux reconstruction. The points raised are well taken and we address them point-by-point below, indicating planned revisions to the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Methods] Methods section (loss-cone flux estimation): the reconstruction combines the two MEPED detectors with pitch-angle distributions taken from quasi-linear theory of chorus/EMIC scattering, yet no cross-validation against independent datasets (FIREBIRD, BARREL, or Van Allen Probes) or test-particle simulations is reported for the Ap > 40 or slot-region events. Because the central claim attributes all reported discrepancies to the Ap parametrization, this unverified assumption is load-bearing.
Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript does not present new cross-validation of the theoretical pitch-angle distributions against independent datasets such as FIREBIRD, BARREL, or Van Allen Probes for Ap > 40 or slot-region conditions. The PADs are taken from established quasi-linear theory of chorus and EMIC scattering as applied in prior POES-based studies. To address the concern we will revise the methods and discussion sections to include an expanded description of the assumptions, cite supporting literature on the theory's application to high-activity periods, and explicitly note the lack of direct validation under the strongest storm conditions. A full new cross-validation study lies outside the scope of this intercomparison. revision: partial
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Referee: [Results] Results (Ap > 40 regime): the claim that the Ap model reaches a plateau and therefore underestimates fluxes during strong storms rests on the accuracy of the theoretical-PAD reconstruction; without demonstrated robustness of that reconstruction under the same conditions, the reported bias cannot be unambiguously assigned to the CMIP6 parametrization.
Authors: We agree that the attribution of discrepancies to the Ap parametrization depends on the reconstruction. The manuscript shows the Ap model saturating for Ap > 40 while the combined-detector estimates continue to increase and exhibit greater variability. In revision we will qualify the conclusions by adding explicit discussion of reconstruction uncertainties in the results section and by softening the language around sole attribution to the CMIP6 model, while retaining the observational comparison as evidence of a behavioral difference between the two approaches. revision: partial
- New cross-validation against FIREBIRD, BARREL, or Van Allen Probes for Ap > 40 and slot-region events cannot be performed without substantial additional analysis not present in the original manuscript.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; external intercomparison against independent data and theory
full rationale
The paper compares the existing CMIP6 Ap parametrization (derived in prior external work from 0° MEPED data) against loss-cone flux estimates constructed from dual-telescope counts plus pitch-angle distributions taken from established quasi-linear wave-particle theory. No parameters are fitted inside the target equations, no self-citation supplies the load-bearing uniqueness or ansatz, and the reconstruction is not defined in terms of the Ap model itself. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Electron pitch angle distributions from theory of wave-particle interactions can be used to estimate loss cone fluxes from the combination of 0° and 90° MEPED detectors.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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discussion (0)
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