30 June 2013 to 3 July 2013
Island of Santorini, Greece (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santorini)
Europe/Athens timezone

Space weather impacts on satellites and forecasting the Earth’s electron radiation belts with SPACECAST

3 Jul 2013, 15:30
20m
Island of Santorini, Greece (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santorini)

Island of Santorini, Greece (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santorini)

Bellonio Cultural Centre, Fira
Oral Waves, Wave-Particle Interactions and Radiation Belt Dynamics Wave, Wave-Particle Interactions and RB Dynamics

Speaker

Prof. Richard Horne (British Antarctic Survey)

Description

Satellites can be damaged by high energy charged particles in the Earth’s radiation belts and during solar energetic particle (SEP) events. Here we review the growing reliance on satellite services, new vulnerabilities to space weather, and previous events that have led to loss of service. We describe a new European system to forecast the radiation belts up to 3 h ahead, which has three unique features: first, it uses physics-based models, which include wave-particle interactions; second, it provides a forecast for the whole outer radiation belt including geostationary, medium, and slot region orbits; third, it is a truly international effort including Europe, United States, and Japan. During the 8–9 March 2012 storm and SEP event, the models were able to forecast the >800 keV electron flux to within a factor of 2 initially, and later to within a factor of 10 of the GOES data. Although ACE and GOES data became unreliable during the SEP event, the system continued forecasting without interruption using ground-based magnetometers. A forecast of the 24 h electron fluence >2MeV is used to provide a risk index for satellite operators. We show that including wave-particle interactions for L* > 6.5 improves the agreement with GOES data substantially and that a fast inward motion of the magnetopause to L* < 8 is related to rapid loss of relativistic electrons at geostationary orbit. Thus, we suggest that better wave-particle models and better coupling between the solar wind and the models of the magnetopause and radiation belts should lead to better forecasting.

Primary author

Prof. Richard Horne (British Antarctic Survey)

Co-authors

Mr DAVE PITCHFORD (SES) Daniel Boscher (ONERA) Dr Daniel Heynderickx (DH Consultancy BVBA) Dr Nigel Meredith (British Antarctic Survey) Dr Sarah Glauert (British Antarctic Survey) Vincent Maget (ONERA)

Presentation materials

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