In 2000–2001 Ulysses passed from the south to the north polar regions of the Sun in the inner heliosphere, providing a snapshot of the latitudinal structure of cosmic ray modulation and solar energetic particle populations during a period near solar maximum. Observations from the COSPIN suite of energetic charged particle telescopes show that latitude variations in the cosmic ray intensity in the inner heliosphere are nearly non-existent near solar maximum, whereas small but clear latitude gradients were observed during the similar phase of Ulysses’ orbit near the 1994–95 solar minimum. At proton energies above ~10 MeV and extending up to >70 MeV, the intensities are often dominated by Solar Energetic Particles ...
Abstract. The increasing level of solar activity at the end of 1997 coincides with the observation o...
We analyze measurements of the 0.5-1.0 MeV/nucleon H/He intensity ratio from the Ulysses spacecraft ...
The radial and latitudinal gradients of anomalous cosmic rays (ACRs) in the heliosphere are expect...
International audienceIn 2000?2001 Ulysses passed from the south to the north polar regions of the S...
Based on elemental abundance ratios derived from the Ulysses COSPIN/LET measurements, we classif...
Abstract: Ulysses, the first spacecraft ever to fly over the poles of the Sun, plays a central role ...
At the time of the solar flare on July 14 (Bastille Day) of 2000, the Ulysses spacecraft was at 3.17...
Ulysses, launched in October 1990, began its second out-of-ecliptic orbit in December 1997, and it...
[1] At the time of the solar flare on the Bastille Day of 2000, the Ulysses spacecraft was at 3.17 A...
International audienceBased on elemental abundance ratios derived from the Ulysses COSPIN/LET measur...
We report observations of solar energetic particles obtained by the HI-SCALE and COSPIN/LET instrume...
We report recent observations of energetic particles at energies 1-40 MeV/n made by the COSPIN/LET i...
Between February 2000 and May 2002, the Ulysses spacecraft made the first ever measurements of solar...
We report recent observations of energetic particles at energies 1–40 MeV/n made by the COSPI...
Recent Ulysses observations from the Sun’s equator to the poles reveal fundamental properties of the...
Abstract. The increasing level of solar activity at the end of 1997 coincides with the observation o...
We analyze measurements of the 0.5-1.0 MeV/nucleon H/He intensity ratio from the Ulysses spacecraft ...
The radial and latitudinal gradients of anomalous cosmic rays (ACRs) in the heliosphere are expect...
International audienceIn 2000?2001 Ulysses passed from the south to the north polar regions of the S...
Based on elemental abundance ratios derived from the Ulysses COSPIN/LET measurements, we classif...
Abstract: Ulysses, the first spacecraft ever to fly over the poles of the Sun, plays a central role ...
At the time of the solar flare on July 14 (Bastille Day) of 2000, the Ulysses spacecraft was at 3.17...
Ulysses, launched in October 1990, began its second out-of-ecliptic orbit in December 1997, and it...
[1] At the time of the solar flare on the Bastille Day of 2000, the Ulysses spacecraft was at 3.17 A...
International audienceBased on elemental abundance ratios derived from the Ulysses COSPIN/LET measur...
We report observations of solar energetic particles obtained by the HI-SCALE and COSPIN/LET instrume...
We report recent observations of energetic particles at energies 1-40 MeV/n made by the COSPIN/LET i...
Between February 2000 and May 2002, the Ulysses spacecraft made the first ever measurements of solar...
We report recent observations of energetic particles at energies 1–40 MeV/n made by the COSPI...
Recent Ulysses observations from the Sun’s equator to the poles reveal fundamental properties of the...
Abstract. The increasing level of solar activity at the end of 1997 coincides with the observation o...
We analyze measurements of the 0.5-1.0 MeV/nucleon H/He intensity ratio from the Ulysses spacecraft ...
The radial and latitudinal gradients of anomalous cosmic rays (ACRs) in the heliosphere are expect...